Cover image for A Genuine Dilemma :  the Piombino Apollo and Fraud in the first and second-century Greco-Roman art market.
A Genuine Dilemma : the Piombino Apollo and Fraud in the first and second-century Greco-Roman art market.
Title:
A Genuine Dilemma : the Piombino Apollo and Fraud in the first and second-century Greco-Roman art market.
Author:
Garvin, Kaitlyn M.
ISBN:
9781339975498
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2016
Physical Description:
1 online resource (76 p.)
General Note:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 55-05.
Adviser: Jeffrey Hurwit.
Abstract:
In 1832, fishermen pulled a full-body bronze sculpture of a youth, now called the Piombino Apollo, from the sea near ancient Populonia. Under life-size, the piece resembles an Archaic kouros, though it has some notable unusual features including an inscription dedicating the supposed image of Apollo to Athena and the signatures of two artists found on a lead tablet hidden within the hollow bronze. These unusual features led scholars to eventually reclassify the piece from an Archaic work of the fifth century to an Archaistic forgery of the second or first century.

Few have challenged this reclassification, but this thesis attempts to complicate the application of the word forgery to the Piombino Apollo. Further, it examines whether a contemporary buyer would have been fooled by the sculpture's "deceptive" traits and offers alternative possibilities to account for the artists' choices of style, pose, and inscriptions.
Local Note:
School code: 0171.
Electronic Access:
Click for full text
Thesis Note:
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Oregon, 2016.
Field 805:
npmlib ysh
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