Tuesday 29 December 2015

Dealing with the media

First - sorry about not dealing with all the comments that people have kindly sent. I am having trouble with posting responses.

A young friend asked me for advice in dealing with the media. Although I have some training in this area, the following is based on personal experiences rather than fully authoritative. This is an edited version.

Basically the media / journalists are interested in “stories” that get their articles / programmes published / commissioned in the face of stiff competition. “Sources” like you and me are means to those ends. This does not mean that are are not interested in causes and rightness - and there are some very good, committed programme-makers -  but the final reality is commercial. TV programmes generally need an American market if they are medium or high budget. America likes sensation. Detailed cases, such a an elaborate scholarly provenance for a work of art, is not their priority.

The basic tenor of articles / programmes is confrontational. That is to say any case needs counter-arguments for the sake of what is called “balance”. This may mean trawling around very peripheral/marginal/dubious “authorities” to oppose what you and I might be saying.  We should always ensure that we know to whom they are talking and ensure that our contributions answer their opposition. If possible, it is good to see an outline and then the script.

With journalism, the “story” is everything. The journalists want something that gets them column inches.  This does not mean to say that truth counts for nothing, and journalists would rather get things right.  Make it clear what is off record and what is not. Most stories are ephemeral. It is good to bear this in mind if thinking of responding.  Often a response simply draws attention to the opposition, and in some cases plays into the hands of those who thrive on polemic.  Any response is best founded on gross errors not opinions. In responding, it is always best to emphasis the positive from the start, not to get on the back foot in relation to any attack. Defensiveness is the worst tactic.

At each stage you should make it clear what you are offering to do / disclose, and on what basis. I give one free consultation (often off the record), and make it clear what is confidential at that stage. Any further engagement with a projected programme needs some kind of agreement/contract (which my agent handles). You are in a less strong position than me, for obvious reasons, but you should make it clear that you need to be treated on a professional basis. At the end of the day, even the best of producers are interested in getting the best out of you and me for the smallest amount of money in order to serve their ends. The only way to modify this is by: 1) having exciting material that they cannot do without; 2) developing a good, collaborative, professional  relationship with all involved in a way that develops trust.

The big rule is, do not over-react. It’s easy to get a reputation for being “difficult”.

Thursday 10 December 2015

PASCAL AND THE MANY MONA LISAS

Now that Pascal’s book is out in all its visual glory, and in the wake of the media interviews, edited as always to emphasise difference, it is worth laying out briefly how his researches look to me. It represents an extraordinary body of dedicated effort. He asked me for comments for his website - knowing that I disagreed with some of his interpretations.  He is a good guy.

The LAM technique undoubtedly provides an important new weapon in the armoury of those interested in scientific examinations of layered paintings. The Holy Grail of scientific examination is to disclose the successive layers that lie below the present surface. Pascal’s mode of analysis, adapting mathematical techniques from signal processing, is revealing far more from the deeper layers than was previously possible, but it does not definitively isolate information from a single layer. We are also unclear as to what is happening as the different frequencies of light penetrate the paint layers to varying degrees and interact in diverse ways with the varied optical properties of the materials within the layers of the picture. This means that tricky acts of interpretation are necessary – even more difficult than is the case with x-rays and infrared. There is always the danger of seeing what we want to see. None of us are immune from this.


Looking at a selection of the LAM images as an art historian, I can see things that are wholly consistent with Leonardo’s creative methods, such as the indication of the use of cartoon and the restless manoeuvrings of contours. Some of what Pascal sees and reconstructs, such as the elaborate headdress, makes no sense to me in terms of design procedures or in terms of Renaissance paintings. I have difficulties with his detailed reconstructions of finished or semi-finished paintings under the surface of the present one. Leonardo’s processes were very fluid, with things coming and going, and with varied levels of finish across the picture. There is obviously a question of presentation here, and I would have resisted the temptation to translate the complex and often ambiguous images from the lower layers into such definite “pictures”.

My strong sense, at this early stage in our understanding of what we are looking at, is that we are witnessing something consistent with the documentation and with Leonardo’s ways of proceeding. I see the painting beginning as a direct portrait of Lisa – building on the innovations of Leonardo’s Milanese portraits – and becoming increasingly conceptualised as picture that combines the combines the tropes of Renaissance love poetry with a profound interest in the microcosm of the human body and the “body of the earth”. I see a steady evolution from portrait to “picture”. The change in her draperies from a Florentine style (as Pascal shows) into a more conceptualised array of veils etc., is part of this process of generalisation. All this is consistent with the idea I first expressed in my 1981 monograph, that Giuliano de’ Medici asked Leonardo to finish the beautiful and remarkable picture when they were both in Rome from 1513-16.


Pascal is opening up very important fields for analysis.  We are at the beginning, Anyone is unwise to pronounce with certainty at this stage. I will have to make some sense of all this for the monograph of the Mona Lisa that I am currently writing with Giuseppe Pallanti.

Friday 4 December 2015

La Bella Principessa "Forgery" again again - framed

I have been looking at Jeanne Marchig's testimony to the New York court on 17 Jan 2012.
She testified that "I had inherited the drawing from my late husband, Giannino Marchig (1897-1983), who was an art restorer and artist, and an expert in Italian Renaissance art. At that time the Drawing was in an antique ornate Florentine wooden frame, which it had been before I married him in 1955".
François Borne of Christie's, rejecting the idea that it came from the Renaissance, as her husband and she firmly believed (though no mention by anyone of Leonardo), said that "your superb German drawing in the taste of the Italian Renaissance fascinates me. I think it is an object of great taste". He advised her "to change the frame in order to make it seem an amateur object of the 19th century not an Italian pastiche". The old frame (now disappeared), which looked like an Italianate mock-up from the 19th, was removed and replaced against Jeanne's wishes, and she did not approve of its cataloguing as German, but she felt she "no choice but to accede".

The date of 1955 rules out Greenhalgh (as do many other things), and works strongly against any other forgery theory, since the scientific examinations reveal features of which no forger could have been aware at that time. This applies to the scurrilous and unsupported identification of Marchig as the forger and to any other pre. 1955 forgery.

All that is left is for opponents to divert the argument into claiming that Jeanne Marchig lied profusely. She seemed to me to be a person of great credibility. I wish she were still with us to confirm the truth, which is evident to anyone who looks at the evidence with an open mind.

Wednesday 2 December 2015

More on La Bella Principessa forgery

Having changed my email and password, I can now get into my own blog. This is a revised version of the comment I posted:

More on the forgery daftness.
The motivation for the absurd claims is clear. Greenhalgh and the writer / filmmaker Waldemar Januszczak are promoting their book and film. It is difficult to think  that Waldemar really believes  the claims to be sustainable. We have to believe that a 17-year old in 1978 knew more than anyone in the world about Leonardo, about his techniques, about the Sforza court and its art, about costumes and hairstyles at the court and about techniques of scientific examination then unknown.


Michael Daley of Artwatch spoke at the attribution conference he has just organised and continued to repeat his errors as fact. He is reported as saying that Leonardo only used parallel shading inside forms not outside them. This is wonderfully ignorant. In Popham's The Drawings of Leonardo da Vinci (only a selection) I counted 24 drawing with parallel hatching being used to create a background for the drawn forms, including No 215, the Vitruvian Man and 210-11 the Leda heads!  He used it when he want to create a special degree of “rilievo” (relief), with the object standing out against its background.

One of the problems with much of the debate that is has been conducted by people using only online sources and not looking in details at the books written by Pascal Cotte and myself. The level of debate has been disappointingly poor. 

Sunday 29 November 2015

Bombing Syria

Why do we never learn?

Obviously it is difficult to argue that we do nothing in the face of the slaughter of innocent people by ISIS. But we should ask how we got here - by repeating massive mistakes. The history of major interventions in non-European countries in my lifetime is disastrous.

I can as a child remember the Korean War. The North Korean regime testifies the failure of that enterprise. Then Vietnam. Then Afghanistan, where we failed to learn from Russia's failure. Then Iraq, followed by the Arab spring, which has left a chaos of instability across North Africa.
Intervening militarily in complex, factionalised, hierarchical cultures that we do not properly understand is a terrible idea. Not least, the  "experts" who are paraded to advise and pontificate in the media on what we should do are discredited. This applies to the civilian pundits as much as the military men.

What should we do? We could try diverting the huge costs of military adventures into diplomacy, education, intelligence and above all investing in the poor communities in which young people are vulnerable to perverted promises of glory.

We should also remember that the perpetrators of monstrosities are someone's son or daughter, probably someone's brother or sister, maybe someone's husband or wife, father or mother. It is said that they are "animals" or "inhuman". We need to assert or core of mutual humanity with them (and everyone in the world) before they plunge into nihilism.

La Bella Principessa is a "forgery"!!!

The silly season for Leonardo never stops. This now applies as much to the profile portrait on vellum, the portrait of Bianca Sforza known as La Bella Principessa, as it does to the Mona Lisa.
The latest in the Sunday Times is the hilarious claim from the convicted forger Shaun Greenhalgh that he forged the portrait in 1978. He is effectively promoting his forthcoming book.
There are many reasons why the story is ridiculous. I give just three for the moment.

1) We have lead isotope dating undertaken by the University of Pavia that shows the white pigment in the sitter’s cheek to be a minimum age of 250 years old. This means that it is not a recent forgery;
2) If someone fakes a Leonardo why do they not promote it as a Leonardo? There was no suggestion from 1978 to 2007 that it was by Leonardo.
3) Obviously anyone with a decent level of technical knowledge can read what Pascal Cotte, myself and other scholars have published and say, “that’s how I did this or that”. But many of the “thises" and “thats" were not known in 1978. A nice case in point is the hand-print technique in the flesh tones as revealed by Pascal's multi-spectral analysis, a technique that we did not know about until the 1980s. 

Faced with the pigment dating, Greenhalgh then claims that he used "organic" materials of appropriate age, including "iron-rich clays" he dug up. You cannot obtain lead-based pigments (non-organic) this way so as to pass the isotope test. No forger in 1978 could have anticipated the recent high-tech tests against which he would have to protect his creation.

The plus side of all this is that it provides another picturesque story for the book I am writing called Living with Leonardo, to be published by Thames and Hudson. Ha Ha!

Sunday 16 August 2015

Labour Party election, Jeremy Corbin

It is notable that prominent figures in the Labour Party, most notably the leadership candidates, simply do not understand why members are deserting them for someone who believes what he says. No-one wants yet another central party office political technocrat who has risen integrally through a discredited system. The repeated claims that the party must appoint a leader who makes the party electable indicates that being electable is the priority, not a set of ideals or radical policies. Burnham has belatedly scattered some radical star dust over his middling policies, but his radicalism is opportunistic and shallow. The candidates'  ganging up to denounce the election of Corbin as tantamount to the annihilation of the party is similar to the negative bullying that almost buried the "no" campaign in the Scottish referendum.  People do not like being bullied, and it is counter-productive.
The Labour Party have bought into the system of international finance and multi-national companies that operate outside international control. Saying, as senior figures do, that the party lost the election because they were too "anti-business" tells us that it has lost its heart and soul.
The other day The Guardian, without apparent irony, covered on following pages the degrading conditions in the refugee camp at Calais and the lush life in the Hamptons in the USA, where the indulgent rich grow fat on money that makes money. Such inequalities become steeper by the year. Where is the political will to do something about this on a national and global basis? Perhaps Corbin has such a will, but I doubt he can do anything about it if he has to grapple with leading such a soulless party.

Tuesday 11 August 2015

Art in History Animations

Since the animated version of the e-book of Art in History (Profile Books) has effectively been suppressed by Google, as explained previously, I am now attaching links to them for anyone interested. Two (space and colour) are didactic and cover foundational aspects that were largely left out of the text, while the others are just meant to be fun and aid memory. They are by Andrew Park of Cognitive Media.
Profile have now aborted what was meant to be an series of enhanced e-books. Amazon the bully triumphs again.


Friday 8 May 2015

election

Ugh!
The worst electoral result since the election of the Churchill Tories after the Attlee government!
A campaign dominated by negativity and fuelling fears has resulted in the favouring of corrupt bankers, unaccountable multi-nationals, rapacious utility companies and the sordid gang of the wealthy, privileged and powerful who run our lives and live beyond political and financial control.
Worst of all the Tories jingoistic (English) playing on fears of tartan wreckers ensured that the vast majority of Scots could only vote one way. It was amazing to see the Scots replacing immigrants as the bogeywomen and men. Scottish political and social instincts are diametrically opposed to those of the Conservatives. The desire for separation is understandable.
I feel sorry for the Lib Dems. The stepped in to avoid potentially disastrous instability at the peak of the financial crisis. The were seduced by power, to be sure, and did not use it consistently well, but they did not deserve this butchery.
The two glimpses of light are the non-election of the pub bore Farage and the defeat of Ed Balls, whose muddled policies and delivery played strongly to claims of Labour's economic incompetence.
The Labour party seem likely to move even further right. This leaves the Greens as the only radical alternative, but they need a change in the system.
It now looks as if necessary electoral reforms are further away than ever.
I'm to hear the silvery Iestin Davies singing Bach this evening, which will remind me that humans can still aspire to great things -  after a debasing election.



Thursday 23 April 2015

Attribution. Science and Judgement by eye

This is based on a paper given in The Hague at the Authentication in Art Congress on 7 May 2014.
Order from chaos? Maybe not, but at least I'm trying...
This is a revised version.



SCIENCE AND JUDGEMENT BY EYE
IN THE HISTORICAL IDENTIFICATION
OF WORKS OF ART

by
MARTIN KEMP


Introductory remarks
This essay reworks the more theoretical sections of the paper delivered at the Authentication in Art congress at the Louwman Museum in the The Hague on 7th May 2014[1] It does not include the two case studies drawn from Leonardo da Vinci: the controversy over the two prime versions of the Madonna of the Yarnwinder; and the attribution of the Salvator Mundi, which made its public debut in Leonardo da Vinci. Painter at the Court of Milan at the National Gallery in London in 2011.[2] The paper was an attempt to bring some ordered thinking into how we judge the status of the varied kinds of evidence that can now be brought to bear upon the attribution of old master paintings. It focused particularly on the often conflicting claims of connoisseurship and scientific analysis. I did not attempt to offer a historical review of the criteria used for attribution, which was the subject of other papers in the conference. Nor am I here anticipating potential new techniques, such as analysis by computer vision.

I am advocating that we replace the term “connoisseurship” with “judgment by eye”, unless we are dealing with attribution within a specific historical context. I do so for two reasons. The first is that “connoisseurship” has increasingly come to carry negative associations - identified with a self-proclaimed (and often class-based) elite whose skills are insulated from systematic scrutiny. The second and more important is that “judgment by eye” signifies skills that extend to any arena in which subtle judgments need to be made about complex and often slippery visual evidence. Looking at computer-generated images of a distant galaxy or X-rays of a breast tumour involve judgment by eye to no lesser degree than scrutinizing visual evidence about a work of art. In the case of the scientific examination of paintings by such techniques as X-radiography or infrared reflectography judgement by eye in art and science intersect in an intimate manner. Judgement by eye embraces all those factors, physiological, psychological, cogntive and personal that are involved in and direct our acts of seeing.

What we conceive to be the most relevant and powerful methods of judgment by eye rely upon a series of tacit assumptions about what is significant  in the making and viewing of a particular work of art. I will begin with a brief philosophical excursus on causal explanations, visual evidence and the standpoint of the observer. This will be followed by some thoughts on falsifiability.

An excursus on causes and the stance of the observer
The example that I used some years ago is a car crash.[3] A car has skidded off a road at a bend and damaged itself (but not the driver) by striking a tree. A series of experts seek an explanation. The most important, at least financially, is the representative of the insurance company, who is interested in finding reasons not to pay out. He or she notices that a tread on one of the tyres is below the legal limit. This is therefore the “cause” of the crash, and the driver’s insurance claim is invalidated. A local authority road engineer notes that the camber of the road at the bend is sloping in the wrong direction and that the tree could not be is a worse position for anyone coming of the road at that bend. A meteorologist explains that there was a very light shower a few minutes earlier and that there had been no rain for the previous fortnight, making the road skiddy. A psychiatrist characterises the driver as a risk-taker who tends to drive dangerously fast. The driver claims that a cat ran out in front of him, causing him to swerve. And so on. There are also a series of more general causes, such as the fact that wheels are round and can roll fast, and that petrol and air combine to make an explosive mixture.

None of these causal explanations is demonstrably wrong and it is likely that one of them alone is not sufficient. It is possible that all of them were necessary for the accident to happen.  Each of the observers will select and prioritise different kinds of evidence depending on their standpoint.

If we take this notion of the standpoint of the observer into works of art, we can see that a comparable variability of seeing applies. Someone concerned with the sociology of art will be interested in such aspects as the economic transaction that brought it about and the social “message” of the work – overt or covert. A feminist may concentrate on the way that gender is handled in a painting, as when a female nude is presented for a male voyeur’s gaze. The iconographer undertakes a close analysis of its symbolic and allegorical content in the context of relevant texts. The style historian (if such a thing still exists) characterises it within broad procession of stylistic developments. The monograph writer sees each work as a manifestation of the artist’s individual production and creative personality.  The connoisseur delights in the aesthetic qualities of the painting. The owner (or even the museum curator) takes a pride in possession that grants a special aura to the picture in her or his eyes. The auctioneer or dealer will seize upon those characteristics that will be most efficacious in the act of selling. The conservator will focus on the condition, looking closely as nasty re-paints. Someone who discovers a painting and is the first to publish it will search out those things that best support the attribution. The press will look for whatever creates a “story”. And so on. This is not to say that each observer is necessarily blind to the visual qualities that the others highlight, or that one way of looking is more right than another, but it is true to say that each will see in a way coloured by their interests and observational skills.

The central message of these simplified examples is that seeing is a very selective and malleable business. It is not arbitrary – everyone saw the crushed front of the car and knew that an accident had occurred -  but what is seen within a framework of explanation is powerfully shaped by what the observer wants to see and what we are looking for, given our set of interests.

A personal anecdote will serve to illustrate this point. I recall in a biology class at school that we were dissecting rats. We had previously tackled mice and other animals. The master, Dennis Clark, who was an outstanding teacher, asked us to find the rat’s gall bladder. When, after a decent interval, he enquired about our success, I was one of the first to put up my hand. I rather fancied myself as a dissector. “It’s a funny thing”, he said, “rats do not have gall bladders”. It was relatively easy for him to falsify our observations by showing that we had contrived to translate some feature within the rat’s abdomen into the desired gall bladder.

The status of observation and explanation in terms of refutability
Potential falsifiability is a key aspect of any process of observation and explanation. In this I am drawing upon Karl Popper, the philosopher and theorist of scientific methods - without necessarily endorsing all aspects of his stance on science.  Popper laid down a series of propositions, including: 
It is easy to obtain confirmations, or verifications, for nearly every theory - if we look for confirmations….
A theory which is not refutable by any conceivable event is nonscientific. Irrefutability is not a virtue of a theory (as people often think) but a vice.

Every genuine test of a theory is an attempt to falsify it, or to refute it. Testability is falsifiability; but there are degrees of testability: some theories are more testable, more exposed to refutation, than others…
Confirming evidence should not count except when it is the result of a genuine test of the theory
Some genuinely testable theories, when found to be false, are still upheld by their admirers — for example by introducing ad hoc some auxiliary assumption, or by reinterpreting the theory ad hoc in such a way that it escapes refutation. Such a procedure … rescues the theory from refutation only at the price of destroying, or at least lowering, its scientific status. [4]

Amongst the procedures that can be applied in attribution, some are subject to falsification on their own terms and may serve definitively to falsify an attribution, such as pigment analysis. Others are definitely not falsifiable on their own terms, most notably traditional connoisseurship. This means that any attempt to place connoisseurship on a scientific basis must necessarily fail.  This is not to say we should only be permitted to utilise arguments that can be subjected to hard falsification, but it does affect the status of non-falsifiable techniques in any process of argumentation.

To Popper’s falsification I would add my version of Ockham’s razor. This is the lex parsimoniae, which states that the hypothesis with fewest assumptions and is most consistent with the evidence - i.e. the most parsimonious – is to be preferred.  When too many qualifying (and untestable) theories need to be aggregated to save a hypothesis, the hypothesis itself should be questioned, as with Copernicus’s questioning of the mechanisms invented to save the Ptolemaic system. The most parsimonious explanation might not be right, but it is the only systematic way to proceed. Too often art historians aggregate a elaborate and arbitrary mish-mash of secondary arguments that look clever and serve the needs of their preferred attribution but have no secure status in any systematic process of argumentation, since they escape refutation in themselves and, if inverted, cannot falsify the attribution.

Constructive and Permissive Arguments
The kinds of evidence and explanation that can he subject to various degrees of falsification can be grouped under two headings: constructive and permissive. By constructive I mean those that add positively and accumulatively to the case being made for a specific attribution. By permissive I am signalling those that present no obstacle to the attribution being made, i.e. they offer a nil obstat. These two types of argument are regularly confused and even conflated in processes of attribution.

I will use three tables to give a sense of the hierarchies involved, looking first at characteristics of a painting that are subject to scientific analysis. I am not trying to present a comprehensive list of scientific techniques in any of the tables. Rather I am giving examples that will allow others to be considered in terms of their place in the hierarchies. By “strong falsification” I mean that the scientific evidence is transparent and fully testable. It also offers strong falsification for attribitions. In general we can see that the scientific evidence is genenrally weak for constructive arguments and strong for the permissive ones.


There is inevitably some schematisation involved in drawing up the the table, not least because scientific techniques, including pigment analysis, cannot wholly exclude some degree of judgement by eye.  We are not dealing with certainties when technology is applied to the scientifc analysis of works of art. By “scientific analysis” I refer to those techniques of examination that deploy science via technologies to define the physical and/or chemical nature of the artefacts.




CONSTRUCTIVE
Contributes additively to
the accumulation of
positive evidence
(Strong falsification for
ones in blue but weak for
constructive arguments )
PERMISSIVE
Nil obstat – contributes
subtractively to remove
obstacles.
(Strong falsification
for all in blue)






Condition
helps to understand present appearance
Condition
helps to understand present appearance


Support
generally not specific to the artist
Support
OK for the artist, period place…



Pigments
rarely specific to the artist
Pigments
OK …


Binders
rarely specific to the artist
Binders
OK …


Layers
occasionally specific to the artist
Layers
OK …


Priming
occasionally specific to the artist
Priming
OK …


Process of execution
pentimenti, underdrawing,
underpainting etc. of a kind specific to the artist – but requiring a lot of judgement by eye
Preparatory procedures
Consistent with expectation





The next table is devoted to aspects of scientific analysis in order of specificity to the act of attribution to a named artist. Those that are most specific involve the highest degrees of judgement by eye when interpreting the images. They are ordered according their degree of malleability, with the most malleable at the top.

In this and the following table, I am using the terms “scientific” and “art historical” in a conventional way without intending to signal that they can be isolated in the actual pratice of attribution – and certainly not to suggest that the application of scientific analysis necessarily delivers more certainty than art historical evidence. In the actual practice of art history, its isolation from scientific analysis is all too common.



SCIENTIFIC (indicative not comprehensive)
Multi-spectral and other scanning methods to disclose images in lower layers (large volumes of complex visual information but difficult to read and needing much judgement by eye)
X-rays (difficulty of reading. Many layers at once. Much judgement by eye)
I-R, especially reflectograms (not always easy to read but good for underdrawings. Moderate or high level of  judgement by eye)
U-V (informative about re-touchings but limited applicability. Moderate level of judgement by eye)
False colour analysis (Moderate level of judgement by eye)
Analysis of binder(s). (Moderate to high level of judgement by eye)
Optical analysis of layers by cross-section samples
(Moderate to high level of judgment by eye)

Carbon dating (crude for specific attributions and only offering a nil obstat)
Pigment analysis  of various kinds (generally offers only a nil obstat)


The third table deals with the criteria that are more traditionally “art historical”. Again the most malleable are at the top. Here I have added standard kinds of evidence relating to provenance and documentation that are highly constructive. The terms “outside” and “orbital”. warrant some explanation.  “Outside” refers to evidence from other fields of expertise that are relevant to the attribution, such as costume. “Orbital” refers to the contextual factors in the period and more specifically within the artist’s career.  For example, in looking at the newly discovered Salvator Mundi we can show there are elements in the optical characterisation of the hand and head that correspond to Leonardo’s analyses of the eye and light. The transformation of the customary orb into a rock crystal sphere of the heavens corresponds to Leonardo’s documented interests. Any new attribution will ideally play an active role in our characterisation of the orbital factors that shape our understanding of the work in its contexts.


ART HISTORICAL
overall judgment by eye  (general impression)
detailed judgements by eye (e.g. brushwork)
wide current consensus of judgment by eye
chronological persistence of
consensual judgment by eye
supporting evidence from content
supporting evidence from “outside”,
e.g. costume
integration  into and leverage on the  orbital
factors” of the historical context, including the artist’s life and works.
primary documentation
provenance
provenance and documentation
wholly integrated


Judgement by eye
As we have stressed, judgement by eye plays a key role in key scientific techniques.  Although the most constructive of the kinds of art historical evidence, documentation and provenance, do not rely upon judgement by eye, it is common that this kind of evidence is not available or is less conclusive than we would wish. In many cases judgement by eye necessarily provides the actual starting point, before other kinds of investigation are undertaken. This is often the situation when a previously unknown or unrecognised work first emerges with specific claims attached to it.

Let us try to formulate some propositions about judgement by eye in a somewhat Popperian manner.

Attribution that is reliant on judgement by eye may be described as an intuitive hypotheses that has substantial implications and consequences.
The implications and consequences range from the financial value of the item to its effect on the context of orbital factors into which it is being inserted. A significant implication is that the work will  actually look different once an attribution has been mooted (whether or not it is accepted), since the visual object is now located in a context of overt and specific comparisons. The attribution will affect our view of the artist to a greater or lesser degree. The attribution may well affect the attributor in personal and professional terms. The reputation of the attributor affects how the attribution is regarded, as does the operation of petty professional jealousies and rivalries. The current ownership of the work and how it emerges into the public domain tends to affect how it is viewed. The owner (private or public) will certainly be affected. The implications will feed back into how we view the attribution. There is a great deal of “noise” in this two-way process of implications and consequences.

At its best and most disinterested, judgement by eye aspires to non-arbitrary subjectivity.
By this I mean that the subjective judgement can be set within a framework of rational argument, accumulated knowledge and relevant experience, not least with respect to visual comparisons. But in itself a hypothesis of attribution that relies wholly or primarily on judgement by eye must necessarily remain provisional, given the malleability of acts of seeing and the lack of any internal process of falsification.

The hypothesis of attribution is given non-arbitrary support to varying degrees by orbital associations and outside evidence.

The hypothesis of attribution may be supported permissively by scientific evidence. It may in some cases be supported constructively by scientific evidence.

The hypothesis of attribution may be supported constructively by primary documentation and provenance. When primary documentation and unbroken provenance coincide, confirmation is strong (though never 100% watertight, particularly for those who wish to dissent).

The hypothesis of attribution is subject to strong falsification by primary documentation and provenance.

The hypothesis of attribution is subject to strong falsification by scientific evidence (which is itself falsifiable).

Conclusion
Attribution is by its nature a hybrid process that utilises arguments that are incommensurable in method.

Judgment by eye is malleable in the light of multiple interests.

Judgement by eye is falsifiable only by factors outside itself.

The visual techniques, “art historical” and “scientific”, that are most specific in the process of identification are those that are the most malleable.

We should strive to recognise the effective status of different kinds of evidence and argument, not over-claiming and/or granting a monopoly to any one type of argument unless it offers hard falsification. We should recognise whether evidence is constructive or permissive. We should remain perpetually alert to the malleability of our seeing, and to the varied personal and contextual factors that operate selectively in what we claim to see. Above all we should be more modest and prudent in our personal investments in our acts of seeing.




[1]  Thanks are due to Milko den Leeuw and Nicholas Eastaugh, the guiding lights of the initiative that lead to the congress, and Evert Louwman who hosted the event in his magnificent museum. Some of the material had been presented at the European Union conservation conference under the umbrella of the CHARISMA project in Florence on 6th March 2014, and in a public lecture at the Department of Art and Archeology in Princeton on 15 April 2103. I am grateful to Nicholas Eastaugh and Jilleen Nadonly for their constructive comments on this paper.
[2]  For the Madonna of the Yarnwinder see M. Kemp, “From Scientific Analysis to the Renaissance Market: the Case of Leonardo's Madonna of the Yarnwinder”, The Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, XXIV, 1994, pp.259-74; and M. Kemp and T. Wells, Leonardo da Vinci’s Madonna of the Yarnwinder. A Historical and Scientific Detective Story, London, 2011. For the Salvator Mundi, see Luke Syson in Leonardo da Vinci. Painter at the Court of Milan, London, National Gallery, 2011, pp. **; and  a forthcoming book by M. Kemp and M. Dalivalle. A complimentary approach via abductive reasoning is provided by Douglas Walton, “An Argumentation Model of Forensic Evidence in Fine Art Attribution”, AI & Society, 28, 2013, pp. 509-30. Walton uses the example of the La Bella Principessa, attributed to Leonardo. See most recently, M. Kemp, Leonardo da Vinci. Ritratto di Bianca Sforza, “La Bella Principessa”, exhibition catalogue,  Palazzo Ducale, Urbino, 2014.


[3] M. Kemp, “The Taking and Use of Evidence, with a Botticellian Case Study”, The Art Journal, XLIV, 1984, pp. 207-15. The argument is adapted from the philosopher Bas van Fraassen.

[4]  Karl Popper, Conjectures and Refutations. The Growth of Scientific Knowledge, London, 1963, pp. 343-4.