Felice Ficherelli wanted a Vermeer.
Well, maybe.
Felice was a contemporary of Vermeer, an obscure painter whom he might have known, or might not have known—we really have no idea. This is all we know for sure:
> * Around 1640, Felice Ficherelli painted “Saint Praxedis.”
* Around 1655, a near-exact replica of that painting appeared.
…
Could this second painting—the copy, the duplicate—have sprung from the hand of Vermeer? Could it be the magical #37? Yes, if you believe Christie’s Auction House, which auctioned that very painting yesterday for $10.2 million. (You just missed your chance to have your own Vermeer!)
Why would Vermeer have copied an obscure Italian painting? Copying was quite common then, not only as an act of training, but also for financial gain. So perhaps Tim’s theory was right—Vermeer was a copier.
But why would a painting—a painting that absolutely no one disputes is a copy of someone else’s painting!—fetch $10 million?
That’s a good question.
Via Jason Kottke [1], “This Is Not a Vermeer ™ — The Message — Medium [2]”
So far (part two (Uber for Art Forgeries — The Message — Medium) [3]) it's an interesting article about authenticity, duplicity and duplication. What, exactly, makes a copy of painting worth $10,000,000, and where you too, can get your own copy of a painting for way less then $10,000,000.
[1] http://kottke.org/14/07/vermeer
[2] https://medium.com/message/this-is-not-a-vermeer-67b752b150c0