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News: Fake Coptic Reliefs in US Collections

Unfortunately a news item on fake Coptic reliefs in the Art Newspaper should not surprise anyone. This disclosure comes in anticipation of an exhibition that will open February 2009 at the Brooklyn Museum on “Coptic Sculpture in the Brooklyn Museum”and for which you may only find an old description (on page 7).

I myself wrote an entry on a Coptic medallion with Thekla bound to Two Beasts from the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Missouri in the catalogue for the 2002-2003 exhibition Byzantine Women and Their World. The article dates the earliest suspicions to Gary Vikan in the 1970s, and at the time of the Byzantine Women exhibit, doubts likewise surrounded the authenticity of the Nelson-Atkins medallion. Most of the fakes entered American collections in the 1960s, and, from the accession number, 48-10, I can only assume that this medallion was acquired in 1948. My earliest scholarly reference to it, however, dates to 1962, so this assumption could be wrong.

Needless to say, I eagerly await determination of its authenticity (so that I can cross the entry off my CV!). I am more curious, however, about what reliefs remain and what they can tell us about Coptic art.

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