Read National Law Review original article Forensic Science and the Authentication of Two Disputed Artworks Tuesday, April 16, 2019 Recent cases demonstrate the role of forensic science in the authentication of fine art, particularly in combination with...
Read ArtNet original article Salvator Mundi Is Getting a New Date – The whereabouts of the world’s most expensive painting remain unclear, but Leonardo da Vinci‘s Salvator Mundi is expected to be included in the catalogue for the Louvre’s forthcoming Leonardo da Vinci...
Read Smithsonian Magazine original article By Jason Daley smithsonian.com June 21, 2019 French painter Eugène Delacroix did many preparatory works for his 1834 masterpiece, “Women of Algiers in Their Apartment.” One of these preliminary paintings disappeared in 1850...
Read Art Law original article A new Peter Paul Rubens painting has been discovered, and it’s a castoff from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Ben van Beneden, director of Antwerp’s Rubenshuis, has now declared Portrait of a Young Girl, possibly Clara Serena...
Read Art Law original article By Fox Rothschild LLP on August 11, 2017 Posted in Art Authentication, Art Conservation/Restoration, Art Museums, Art Valuation In March 2016, a US auction gallery sold an Old Master oil painting (a sketch of an old woman) for...
Read Art Law original article By Fox Rothschild LLP on December 1, 2017 Some in the art world may not know that the 500-year old masterpiece painting Salvator Mundi (“Savior of the World”) by Leonardo da Vinci that recently sold for nearly half a billion dollars is...