Subject: Call for papers--fakes and forgeries
Call For Papers "Deceit, Deception & Discovery: Fakes in the Museum and the Marketplace" Two years ago the Decorative Arts Society and Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library collaborated on a one-day symposium--"New Visions, New Quests" that highlighted groundbreaking scholarship in the decorative arts of the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries. On December 5, 1998, the two institutions will again sponsor a decorative arts conference at Winterthur. This year's topic focuses on fakes and forgeries within the art and antiques world. Long a favorite of collectors and museum-goers, the subject has its own rich bibliography replete with such wonderfully descriptive titles as "Fabulous but Fake" and "Assume Nothing." We seek new discoveries in this important field from curators, conservators, and craftsmen; academics, educators, and students; antiques dealers, auctioneers, appraisers, and collectors--in short, anyone involved in the study of decorative or fine arts. Our scope includes materials make in America or Europe and dating between 1640 to the present. We encourage proposals that reveal the reasons behind a particular deception as well as the skill of the deception itself. In addition, we urge individuals to share the excitement of discovery sparked by the study of a fake as well as the revelations gleaned by authentic objects through that study. Please submit a one-page abstract of your paper to Brock Jobe Department of collections, conservation, and Interpretation Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library Winterthur, Delaware 19735 Fax: 302-888-4700) In addition, attach to the proposal your summer address, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address. Stipends will be awarded to everyone presenting papers at the conference. The deadline for proposals is July 1, 1998. Lynn Proden Program Assistant Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:92 Distributed: Thursday, May 14, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-92-026 ***Received on Saturday, 9 May, 1998