Giacometti
Art series with Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould. The team try to find out whether a stark, white square of plaster is one of Giacometti's earliest works.
Twentieth-century sculptures are hot property in the art market, with Giacometti's Pointing Man figure selling for $141m at auction in New York in 2015, making it the most expensive sculpture ever sold. Could a stark, white square of plaster that has been passed down through an English family with art world connections be one of Giacometti's earliest and most daring works?
The quest to discover the history of the sculpture, known as The Gazing Head, leads the team to the bohemian world of 1930s Paris, where artists and intellectuals rubbed shoulders in cafes and studios. Can the team find any proof that the owner's grandmother acquired the sculpture from Giacometti during the time she spent studying and modelling in the city? If it's genuine, the sculpture could be worth hundreds of thousands of pounds, but there's a problem - it was once knocked over by a cat and broken into several pieces. The team hope that a high-tech CT scan might reveal more about the damage it has sustained during its life and even yield clues about its origins.
The trouble is, proving the authenticity of sculptures is notoriously difficult as works are often produced in multiple editions - and can be easy to replicate. As the investigation unfolds, the team travels to Germany to find out how police broke up a forgery ring that churned out thousands of fake Giacometti pieces. The final decision lies with the Giacometti Committee in Paris - and this could be one of the most complex cases they've ever considered.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
You are at the last episode
Clips
-
Our first look at the 'Gazing Head'
Duration: 01:33
-
Philip meets a sculpture expert
Duration: 01:34
-
Walking the steps of Giacometti
Duration: 02:37
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Fiona Bruce |
Presenter | Philip Mould |
Executive Producer | Simon Shaw |
Series Producer | Robert Murphy |
Director | Robert Murphy |