- James Beck (art historian)
James H. Beck (
May 14 1930 –May 26 2007 ) was an American art historian specialising in theItalian Renaissance . He was an outspoken critic of many high-profile restorations and re-attributions of artworks, and founded the pressure groupArtWatch International to campaign against irresponsible practices in the art world.Biography
James Beck was born in 1930 in
New Rochelle, New York , a short distance away (as he was known to boast) fromThomas Paine 's former house in that city. After graduating fromOberlin College in 1952 he trained as a painter, firstly atNew York University and then at the Accademia di Belle Arti inFlorence . AtColumbia University he undertook his doctoral dissertation, on the sculpture ofJacopo della Quercia , under the supervision ofRudolf Wittkower . Beck was granted a PhD in 1963 and he published his monograph on the sculptor in 1991. He remained on the art history faculty at Columbia for his entire life, serving as Professor of Italian Renaissance painting and sculpture from 1972.A turning-point in Beck's career came in 1991 when, as the world's authority on Jacopo, he was invited to comment on a recent restoration of one of the sculptor's works, an effigy of Ilaria del Carretto in
Lucca Cathedral . Beck's enraged response was recorded by two reporters for newspapers based in Florence andLivorno , and in further interviews published in "La Stampa " (ofTurin ) and "Il Giornale dell'Arte" (based inAlessandria ) he continued to voice his indignation at what he deemed a ruinous cleaning job. The sculpture's restorer filed lawsuits against him in the courts of all four cities citing criminal defamation, an offence punishable by three years' imprisonment in Italy.Eventually, Beck won all four cases, and his success prompted him to establish
ArtWatch International the subsequent year. The organisation's other founding member was Michael Daley, a British art historian with whom Beck co-wrote "Art Restoration: The Culture, the Business and the Scandal" in 1993. The book was an attack on the profession of art restoration, and was especially critical of the cleaning ofMichelangelo 's Sistine Chapel frescoes which was at that time nearing completion. Beck also publicly criticised the attribution of both the Metropolitan Museum's "Stroganoff Madonna" (which it bought in 2001) toDuccio and the "Madonna of the Pinks " (the National Gallery's major acquisition of 2004) toRaphael . He argued for the de-attribution of these works in his study "From Duccio to Raphael: Connoisseurship in Crisis", published posthumously in 2007.References
* Selby Whittingham, " [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20070608/ai_n19294871 PROFESSOR JAMES BECK] ". "
The Independent ", June 8, 2007. Retrieved from FindArticles.com on August 2, 2007
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