Genuine fakes How phony things teach us about real stuff

Lydia Pyne

Book - 2019

The world is full of genuine fakes--the objects that fall into the space between things that are real and those that are not. Whether or not we think things are authentic is a matter of perspective. From stories of audacious forgeries to feats of technological innovation, historian Lydia Pyne explors how the authenticity of eight genuine fakes--art forgeries, fake fossils, nature documentaries, synthetic flavors, museum exhibits, Maya codices and Paleolithic replicas--depends on their unique combination of history, science and culture.

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Subjects
Published
London : Bloomsbury Sigma 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Lydia Pyne (author)
Physical Description
304 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-293) and index.
ISBN
9781472961822
9781472961839
  • Introduction: Warhols without Warhol
  • The solemn mockery
  • The truth about lying stones
  • Carbon copy
  • A fake of a different flavour
  • Taking a look through Walrus Cam
  • The great blue whale
  • And now it's the real deal
  • The art of making the palaeolithic come to life
  • Conclusion: As seen in the British Museum.
Review by Booklist Review

It seems that ever since people first started to desire collectibles be they artifacts from previous civilizations, religious relics, precious gems, fossils, works of art, or even artificial flavorings other people have endeavored to fulfill those wishes by making fake, contemporary copies. This appealing overview of phony stuff looks at history through fresh lenses, setting scenarios that explain why particular goods were in demand at certain times, how counterfeiters managed to produce their purloined products, and why customers were so eager to embrace the fakes as real deals, no matter the crudeness of the attempt. Historically, some replications have been very sophisticated and confounded experts; some have been dismissed out of hand; others have gained such notoriety that they have become collectibles in their own stead. Author Pyne (Seven Skeletons, 2016) provides sufficient context to engage readers, explaining how curators and scientists have been duped in the past, and what they have learned as a result. This slightly off-beat account should be of great interest to collectors, amateur archaeologists, historians, and art connoisseurs.--Kathleen McBroom Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historian Pyne (Seven Skeletons) offers a thoughtful examination of what it is to be fake, using case studies ranging from instances of outright deception to clearly labeled recreations, with plenty of gray area in between. In the process, she raises a host of provocative questions, not least of which is this: can a replica be good or authentic, or can it even "stand in for the genuine thing?" For example, Pyne notes that many modern artificial food flavors are chemically and structurally identical to their natural equivalents. Elsewhere, she demonstrates the utility of fakes by pointing to the painstaking recreation of France's Chauvet Cave, in which Paleolithic paintings were found, in order to preserve the actual site as it was. Pyne doesn't neglect instances of outright deception, such as by prolific 18th-century Shakespearean forger William Henry Ireland, who made his fake documents, letters, and plays more convincing by spelling Shakespeare's name inconsistently, just as the Bard did himself. Thanks to this and plenty of other odd and intriguing facts--such as that synthetic banana flavoring was codified in the late 19th century and thus mimics a now-extinct variety of the fruit--Pyne's well-written survey illuminates the ramifications of various types of fakery, even while showing how murky the concept of what is fake can get. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An intriguing exploration of "frauds, forgeries, and fakes."Because of recent "worries about fake news' and alternative facts,' the question of authenticity has taken on particular urgency," writes historian Pyne (Seven Skeletons: The Evolution of the World's Most Famous Human Fossils, 2016, etc.). She offers examples "where a real' object ends and where a fake' (or less than real) object begins," drawing from a variety of disciplines including art, literature, mineralogy, natural history, archaeology, and wildlife documentaries. In the late 19th century, the "Spanish Forger" plied hisor her; the forger's identity was never knowntrade in the art world, becoming "one of the most skillful, and successful, and prolific forgers of all time." Many museums had his Renaissance replicassome 350 of themuntil the ruse was uncovered years later. In the late 18th century, William Henry Ireland began forging all things Shakespeareautographs, wills, even whole playsusing period ink and paper. The collectable fakes eventually became "more genuine for having been fake in the first place." In the chapter titled "The Truth About the Lying Stones," Pyne recounts how an expert was duped by three young men's forged fossils. The scholar went to court in 1726 in hopes of "saving his honour." Man's creation of diamonds began in the late 18th century and reached its zenith in the 1950s when De Beers began making and selling synthetic diamonds. In the mid-20th century, companies actively created new, fake flavors as they drove "consumers' expectations about what food ought to taste like." Pyne ponders the "delicate tango of blending art and artifice into the world of storytelling in wildlife films." Particularly fascinating is France's costly replica of the famous Palaeolithic Chauvet Cave; the real one is closed to the public. Pyne also scrutinizes blue whale skeletons, a Mayan Codex, and artist Bansky's paleo-inspired artifact, with "fake provenance and falsified index number," surreptitiously installed in the British Museum, which went undiscovered for days.Genuine history smartly explored. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.