"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
The Fakes that Embarrassed the Met, Part 3: A Noble Resolution
by Lawrence Jeppson
After
the Metropolitan Museum of Art received the first of its
extraordinary Etruscan terracotta statues, the Old Warrior,
curator Gisela Richter wanted to publish a paper about it. John
Marshall, the Met’s agent in Rome who had procured the statue,
warned her not to publish.
His
veto had nothing to do with authenticity. He had heard there might be
another important piece that the grave robbers might offer for sale,
and he did not want to alert competitive agents, informants, and
spies of the secret big-time Etruscan artifacts.
When
a museum publishes a work of art in an official paper or exhibition
catalog, it puts the museum’s reputation on the line certifying
the authenticity and importance of that art. Just putting the piece
of art on show is at least a half-measure of that certitude.
On
15 November 1915, Marshall wrote Richter about “the biggest T.
C. [terracotta] you or any reasonable being ever saw.” Ten
weeks later the pieces arrived in crates in New York City, ready for
Richter and others on the antiquities staff to reassemble and study.
By
then, Marshall and Edward P. Warren, a friend who usually represented
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, had begun working on the statue’s
provenance problem. Where, exactly, had the statue been dug up? Who
were the finders? Middlemen were involved. There was no trail they
could follow.
Then
Marshall was offered the Gigantic Head. Same murky provenance.
But the statue was breathtaking and unique. He bought, and in 1916,
it was on its way to New York.
Shortly
after the Great War [WW I] ended, Marshall began hearing rumors about
an even more fabulous Etruscan statue. Being astute cons, the fakers,
fanning the market, were floating fancies before they had finished
building, baking, and breaking their new creation. A 1919 telegram
suggests Marshall had seen it, but two years would pass before he was
able to complete the purchase of the Big Warrior.
As
I wrote last week, twelve years would pass before the Met put the
three Etruscan treasures on public view.
Why
the wait?
There
was still the possibility that another comparable masterpiece might
surface; no point in alerting competitors by reporting what already
had been secreted off to New York. There was a rumor of a high-relief
slab 6.5 by 20 feet with about twenty figures in combat, some said to
be carrying round and oval shields, and there was a rumor of another
large head whose helmet crest alone was nearly a meter high.
More
importantly, the Met’s curators, scholars, and managers wanted
to be sure of what they had. There still were no reliable
provenances. Marshall continued to study every large-scale Etruscan
terracotta that he could find between Rome and London. He repeatedly
tried to visit the dig near Orvieto, but every time the excavators
were either sick or had some other excuse. Month after month, then
years, dragged by.
The
museum did not rely only on its own staff. Some visiting experts were
allowed to inspect and evaluate the hidden statuary.
In
1933, the Met finally put the three Etruscan terracottas on display.
They were an instant public success.
Gisela
Richter wrote her paper, Etruscan Terracotta Warriors in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, but the Met would not let her publish
it until 1937, more than 20 years after she had written her
suppressed paper on the Tall Warrior. It was only the sixth
time in its history that the museum had published a definitive study
of anything.
The
paper was only one mark of Gisela’s distinguished career. She
published her first book when she was 27, the last when she was 80.
Publication
officially recognized the three Etruscan terracottas as genuine works
of art. They enjoyed that status for 24 years.
The
Met had made a mistake, as every museum of any consequence does
occasionally. Publication brought a simmering conflict into the open.
There were plenty of people willing to pounce on what they claimed
was the Met’s error, and most of the pouncers were Italians.
A
group of Italian scholars proclaimed Italian preeminence in matters
Etruscan. Only they could tell. Professor Giulio Rizzo, however,
declared the Colossal Head of indisputable authenticity. Young
archaeologist Massino Pallottino dismissed all three pieces as
forgeries. For his temerity he was summoned to Rizzo’s
apartment for an angry tongue-lashing.
World
War II muffled the outcries from Italy — temporarily. In 1950,
a so-called expert, Michelangelo Cagiano, asserted that the
craquelure on the glaze had been caused by an aging varnish. He had
not seen the terracottas. They had no varnish.
An
art restorer advance the theory that the black glaze on the warriors
was only casein paint, a theory that was quickly disproved.
Another
“authority” suggested that the grog used in the statues’
clay came from broken up Peroni beer bottles.
Gisela
Richter retired and moved to Rome. In 1955, Christine Alexander, her
successor, went to Florence to visit Amedeo Riccardi, the last
survivor of the Riccardi cousins (and a non-member of the ring). He
promised he would talk to the old people of Orvieto and look for
anything that might be helpful. For the next five years, all he
produced were red herrings.
In
1959, Dietrich von Bothmer (1918-2009) succeeded Miss Alexander as
chief curator of Greek and Roman art. Von Bothmer was showing Cagiano
through the museum. Cagiano, smarting perhaps because of his foolish
assertion about varnish, refused to take even a second glance at the
warriors.
“How
can I,” he asked, “when I know the man who made them?”
Clearly,
the time had come for the Met to make a new and thorough
investigation. The task would fall to two men. Von Bothmer would
concentrate upon esthetics, historical data, and provenance. Joseph
Veach Noble (1920-2007), the vice chairman of the museum, would take
care of the scientific analysis. Noble had begun working for the
museum in 1956.
Joseph Veach Noble
When
I met Noble, he doubled as the silent partner of a Fifth Avenue
company called Film Counselors, which was making a short film for me.
The firm produced educational motion pictures, including a long one
each year for the American Petroleum Institute.
Film
Counselors’ president was the charismatic Will Parker, and
despite his profane tongue, we became good friends. My friendship
with Will carried over to Joe.
I
was astonished when Noble, 36, was appointed the number two person at
the Met, the person who ran the day-to-day management of one of the
greatest museums in the world. Then I learned why.
Coupled
with his administrative genius, Joe was one of the world’s
leading authorities on Greek ceramics. A self-taught expert on Greek
vases, he had an insatiable curiosity about discovering the lost
techniques of ancient Attic craftsmen. In a potter’s studio in
his home he searched for the secrets in making indistinguishable
replicas.
As
the preamble to my book The Fabulous Frauds, I quoted a
passage from his book, The Technique of Painted Attic Pottery:
In
order to detect forgery, it is best to remember that every object
made by man carries within it the evidence of the time and place of
its manufacture. It is a challenge to the trained eye of the art
historian and to the technical examination of the scientific analyst
to penetrate beneath the surface appearance and to discover the
truth.
This
is a parallel to what I wrote a few weeks ago in my column about
Edmond Locard, the real Sherlock Holmes: “Every crime scene
investigator, anywhere, uses what is known as Locard’s
Exchange Principle, the transfer of evidence between objects:
every contact leaves a trace.”
In
a characteristic moment of modesty, Joe told The New York Times,
“One day I walked around the derrière of one of the
warriors and took a penknife and, yes, took off a piece about the
size of a pin.”
As
Joe pursued his interest in classical antiquities, he built one of
the largest private collections of Attic vases in the United States —
genuine Attic vases, though he was capable of producing replicas that
could not be detected through ordinary appraisal.
Among
the many lost techniques of ancient craftsmen was the means by which
the Greeks (and by extensions the Etruscans) obtained the colors for
decorating their ceramic ware. In 1942, a German scientist discovered
that the iron oxide present in Attic clay turned red if fired in an
atmosphere permitting abundant oxygen but black in an atmosphere
starved of oxygen. Because of the war his discoveries were little
noticed, and he died before he could develop them further.
Noble
bought Attic clay, which contains ferric oxide, from Greece. He
extracted the finest particles and used them with water to make a
slip, the smooth material painted for glaze and decoration on the
body of vases. When he allowed plenty of air into his kiln during the
firing of a completed vase, the kiln became filled with inactive
carbon dioxide. Because of the ferric oxide, both body and glaze
turned red.
When
Noble threw green wood or moist sawdust on the fire, then closed the
kiln to outside air, the resulting incomplete combustion filled the
kiln with highly active carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide exerts such
a strong pull for oxygen atoms that it takes them right out of the
clay. The chemical composition of the clay changes from ferric oxide
to ferrous oxide, and the color of the clay turns from red to black.
But
Attic and Etruscan vases have red bodies and black decorations. Noble
discovered that if he next opened a hole in the kiln and let fresh
air come rushing back, the body of the vase — but only the body
— would turn red again.
Because
the vases had been decorated with the slip, the fine particles of
quartz in the slip had fused: the glazed areas had become impervious,
and the fresh oxygen atoms could not penetrate. These areas remained
black, providing care was taken to keep the firing temperature above
1000 degrees C.
That
is the secret of Attic black, and none of the Riccardis or Fioravanti
or anyone else living knew it when the Etruscan fakes were
fabricated. The forgers had used an anachronistic process to get
their colors, and modern science eventually unmasked it.
Noble
took samples from the warriors to a laboratory for spectrographic
analysis and found the presence of manganese, a coloring agent
unknown in Etruscan times.
Von
Bothmer and Noble, traveling separately, examined large-scale
terracottas from Greece, Cyprus, and Etruria in Cyprus, Greece,
Italy, France, England, and Denmark.
While
Joe was doing his spectrographic studies, von Bothmer learned that
Harold Parsons, who had been living in Rome since 1953, was gathering
evidence on the modern origin of the terracottas. For 20 years he had
made no secret of his suspicions.
When
the Old Warrior was made, Fioravanti had broken off and kept
its thumb. On 5 January 1961, Parsons brought Fioravanti to the
American Consul in Rome, where the old man made and signed a full
confession.
The
next day von Bothmer arrived in Rome to interview Fioravanti and go
over the ground in Orvieto. Von Bothmer brought with him a plaster
cast of the hand of the Old Warrior. Without hesitation, the
old forger took out the thumb he had kept for fifty years. The fit
was perfect.
This
did not prove that the warrior was fake. Fioravanti, or someone
else, could have found or stolen the authentic thumb. But the old
faker filled in so many details that there was no doubting his story.
So,
on Valentine’s Day, 1961, New Yorkers and others around the
world picked up their morning papers and learned that the
Metropolitan’s astounding Etruscan warriors were fabulous
frauds.
As
an addendum to this story, the more politically powerful Walter
Hoving (see the
first of these three columns)
edged Joseph Noble to become the director of the Met. Joe left to
become the distinguished director of the Museum of the City of New
York. His collection of some 150 genuine Attic vases was acquired by
the Tampa Museum.
Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor
and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser. He is America's leading authority on
modern, handwoven French tapestries. He is expert on the works of William Henry Clapp, Nat
Leeb, Tsing-fang Chen, and several French artists.
He is founding president of the non-profit Mathieu Matégot Foundation for Contemporary
Tapestry, whose purview encompasses all 20th-century tapestry, an interest that traces back to
1948. For many years he represented the Association des Peintres-Cartonniers de Tapisserie and
Arelis in America.
Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of
Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to
or organizer of more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan, and Taiwan.
He owns AcroEditions, which publishes and/or distributes multiple-original art. He was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors' Investment Fund.
He is the director of the Spring Arts Foundation; Utah Cultural Arts Foundation, and the Fine
Arts Legacy Foundation
Lawrence is an early-in-the-month home teacher, whose beat is by elevator. In addition, he has spent the past six years hosting and promoting reunions of the missionaries who served in the French Mission (France, Belgium, and Switzerland) during the decade after WWII.