
A Report On The Colloquium Convened In Athens To
Discuss The Authenticity Of The Getty Kouros

In May of 1992, in Athens, a meeting of experts convened to examine a
Kouros belonging to The J. Getty Museum in Malibu California. The statue
which the museum had purchased in 1983, had generated a world wide media
storm due to the unsolved question of it's authenticity. Repected authorities
disagreed; some said it was a Greek antiquity and others that it was
a modern fake. The museum called for a colloquium and sent the statue to
Athens to be examined by 19 experts in related fields. This article presents
a brief summary of the 19 papers delivered at the colloquium. Here are
the papers pro and con. You decide. Do you think the Getty Museum was
taken for millions, or have they acquired a rare Greek antiquity?

Paper 1
By Marion True
Curator Of Antiquities
The J. Getty Museum
The Anamolies
Many anomolies are cited by the author. The Getty kouros doesn't fit into
any of the currently recognized kouros styles, but rather seems to combine
them into one.
The Material
The marble is confirmed to be from Thassos. The surface has been altered
by calcium oxylate which may be the result of natural lichen growth or
a deliberate application of oxalic acid, a common forger's device.
The Provenance
The Getty purchased the work from a dealer in Switzerland who claimed
to have purchased it from a Dr. Jean Lauffenburger of Geneva. Photocopies
of letters to Dr. Lauffenburger concerning the statue have been proven
to be forgeries. The original documents have mysteriously dissappeared.
Conclusion
The Getty displays the work as an antiquity with the caveat that it may
be a forgery.

Paper 2
BY Professor Brunilde Sismondo-Ridgway
Department Of Classical And Near Eastern Archaeology
Bryn Mawr College
Professor Sismondo-Rigeway presents a list of anatomical anomilies, yet
provides an example of similar anomalies present in other authenticated
Kouroi.She notes the abscence of paint on the Getty Kouros and points out
that all other kouroi , with the possible exception of the Melos kouros,
show traces of paint. She points out that the plinth never had a lead attachment
to the base as other kouroi do, but adds that it may, perhaps have simply
rested upon its base.
Conclusion
Professor Sismondo-Ridgway offers the opinion that the question of the
authenticity of the Getty kouros cannot be resolved in less than 50 years.

Paper 3
Professor Evelyn B. Harrison
Institute Of Fine Arts
New York University
Professor Harrison describes the many details of the kouros which contradict
the ancient Greek canon of male physical beauty. She notes the androgyny
of the form and its homosexual implications. She comments on the abrasive
finishing and wonders that it was ever meant to be painted.
Conclusion
Professor Harrison is inclined to dismiss the Getty kouros as a fake on
aesthetic grounds.

Paper 4
Professor Bernard Holtzman
University Of Paris X
Professor Holtzman notes that the general style of the kouros is close
to the Attic style and points out that though the use of Thassian marble
in Attica is not an impossibility, it is most certainly anomolous. He suggests
that in the light of the Getty kouros we may need to re examine our dependancy
upon established systems of classification and posits a forensic investigation
into the obious provenance fraud.
Conclusion
Professor Holtzman takes neither side in this debate, but rather suggests
further investigation.

Paper 5
Professor Sir John Boardman
Lincoln Professor
Oxford
Professor Boardman seems to feel that the Getty kouros presents an occasion
for examining our entire system for the classification of ancient Greek
art. He seems to reject the old Gisela Richter system for classifying kouroi
and calls for a re examination of the entire body of works.
Conclusion
Offers no opinion as to the authenticity of the Getty kouros.

Paper 6
Professor Vasilis Lambrinoudakis
Athens University
Professor Lambrinoudakis notes that the sculptor deliberately used a block
of stone which was defective and points out that this is singular in the
production of Kouroi.
Conclusion
Professor Lambrinoudakis agrees that we can neither call the work genuine
or fake given the technology we possess today.

Paper 7
Professor Jean Mercade
University Of Paris I
Professor Mercade stresses the modernity of the form and points out that
the overall arrangement of the planes is more appealing to contemporary
tastes than to ancient ones.
Conclusion
Professor Mercade reserves judgment due to the lack of consensus among
the physical scientists.

Paper 8
Dr. Georgios Donatas
President
The Archaeological Society Of Athens
Dr. Donatas offers a stylistic analysis which points out the eclectisim
of the work and the resulting anachronisms.
Conclusion
Dr. Donatas rejects the authenticity on traditional stylistic and aesthetic
grounds.

Paper 9
Professor, Dr.Helmut Kyrieleis
President
The German Archaeology Institute
Berlin
Dr. Kyrieleis points out that stylistic analysis itself, must be re examined
in the light of The Getty Kouros and suggests that a forger would have
the stylistic knowledge to avoid the anamolies here presented.
Conclusion
Dr. Kyrieleis does not offer a deffinate answer to the question.

Paper 10
Dr. Ismini Trianti
Curator Of Antiquities
Acropolis Museum
Dr. Trianti is concerned with the idiosyncracies of the work and the location
of the atelier. She points out that the various stylistic elements cover
a time span of more than 30 years in what we understand to be the evolution
of the techniques associated with kouroi. Besides the various techniques
used in the details, she adds the apparent evidence of 4 widely divurgent
ateliers.
Conclusion
The work is a fogery based upon bits and pieces of ancient kouroi.

Paper 11
Professor Angelous Delivorrias
Director: Benaki Museum
Athens University
Professor Delavorrias discounts all the schools and ateliers of ancient
Greece as possible sources of The getty Kouros on the basis of stylistic
grounds and declares it to be a pastiche of many styles.
Conclusion
Professor Delavorrias reserves a deffinate answer.

Paper 12
Dr. Ilse Kleeman
German Archaeological Institute
Athens
Dr. Kleeman believes that her canon of overall form is of more importance
than the more obvious Richter system which emphasises detail rather than
form. Her evaluation is based upon the consistancy of body proportions
in Greek sculpture. She affirms that The Getty Kouros displays the form
of a 6th century BCE kouros and the details may be idiosyncratic.
Conclusion
Dr. Kleeman accepts The Getty Kouros as genuine.

Paper 13
Dr, Eleanor Guralnick
The University Of Chicago
Dr, Guralnick's paper takes an emminently rational approach which minimizes
subjectivity. Her evaluation is based upon the consistancy of body proportions
in Greek sculpture. She has taken scientific measurmants of the work and
finds the proportions consistant with the canons of the period. She notes
the idiosyncratic nature of all artists.
Conclusion
Dr. Guralnick favors the authenticity of The Getty Kouros.

Paper 14
Mr. Stelios Triantis
Sculptor
National Museum
Athens
Mr. Triantis examines The Getty Kouros with the technical knowledge of
an experienced sculptor. He appears to discover the use of tools not believed
to have been available in the 6th century BCE. Judging from the rough bottom
cut of the plinth, he offers the opinion that the kouros was never intended
to be attached to a base to be placed in a temple as a votive offering.
Conclusion
Mr. Triantis does not accept The Getty Kouros as authentic.

Paper 15
Mr. Peter Rockwell
Sculptor
Rome
Mr. Rockwell makes four strong points:
1. the figure was carved lying flat on the ground in the archaic technique.
2. No drills were used.
3. Projecting planes were isolated before detailing.
4. The figure was carved with an axe like chisel not used since the 16th
century.
Conclusion
Mr. Rockwell believes The Getty Kouros to be genuine.

Paper 16
Mr. Jerry Podany
Head Of Antiquities Conservation
J. Paul Getty Museum
Mr. Podany outlines the exhaustive efforts of a team of scientists working
at The Getty Museum to simulate the aging process upon the surface Of new
Thassian marble. Their attempts to reproduce artificially the surface on
the stone ot The Getty Kouros were not successful.
Conclsion
Mr. Podnay offers no opinion on the authenticity of The Getty Kouros.

Paper 17
Mr. Tony Kozelj
Ecole Francaise De Athene
Mr. Kozelj presents a history of quarring marble on the island of Thassos.
Conclusion
Mr. Kozelji offers no opinion.

Paper 18
Dr, Frank Preusser
Associate Director
The Getty Conservation Institute
Dr. Preusser presents a report on the scientific examination of the physical
properties of The Getty Kouros conducted by The Getty Conservation Institute.
He notes that it cannot be attributed to any of the existing quarries on
the island in modern times. Despite extensive testing, it could not be
proven that unnatural patination was present.
Conclsion
Dr. Preusser offers no opinion.

Paper 19
Professor Norbert S. Baer
Hagop Kervorkian Professor Of Conservation
New York, University
Professor Baer presents a discussion of modern capabilities in the dating
of artifacts and offers the opinion that the science is not, as yet, exact.
Conclusion
Professor Baer offers no opinion as to the authenticity of The Getty Kouros.
Summary
The papers delivered at the colluquim reveal a difference of opinion between
the physical scientists and the more conservative art historians. Most
of the arguments against authenticity are based either upon aesthetic perceptions
rooted in the Richter canon or subjective assessments. As Dr, Kyrieleis
points out, current metods of authentication are as much on trial as The
Getty Kouros.
In reading these opinions some important questions arise which remain
unanswered. Is every work of ancient Greek art automatically to be considered
a masterpiece which represents a school of creative thought? May not some
works be considered to be entirely idiosyncratic, or even badly done? Is
it not possible for more than one sculptor to have carved upon this stone
over the course of some years? if it were unfinished and never placed in
a temple, how otherwise might it have been used?
Professor Lambrinoudakis thinks it not possble that a sculptor would begin
to work upon a stone with an obvious flaw, but do we know that the flaw
was obvious from the first? We have examples which indicate that upon the
discovery of a flaw, a sculptor abandoned his project. There is no reason
to believe that such was not the case here. If the flaw was obvious, why
was it not obvious to the stone cutters on Thassos and why was it not broken
up and used to fill old mines or dumped into the sea as Mr. Kozelj tells
us was the usual custom? It can only be concluded that the original carver
knew, either from the start or quite early on that his work would be unsaleable
as a religious votive or, indeed, as a forgery. Why did he continue to
work on an unsaleable object? Perhaps this is an antiquity as many experts
believe it to be. Perhaps it was never intended to serve the traditional
function of a kouros and was therefore never finished in the ususal manner.
Stone is a difficult and expensive medium. unlike a graphic artist, a
stone carver cannot practice with endless experimentation using cheap and
disposable materials. A life size, or larger, sculpture lying unfinished
and valueless on the floor of an atelier must certainly present an attractive
opportunity to a sculptor, or indeed, several sculptors. Could this worthless
stone have been used for experimentation? Dr, Trifanti identifies four
different styles in the work. Professor Holtzman posits a term of more
than thirty years in the stylistic development of the Kouros genre. Might
several artists have had a hand in what Professor Delivorrias calls a pastiche?
If one consensus arrises in the colloquim, it is that the true age of
The Getty Kouros cannot be stated with absolute certainty until advancement
in the technology of the physical sciences allow indesputable evidence
indicating when the surface was first exposed. Even with such evidence,
we shall be presented with many questions about this most enigmatic work
and indeed, the current metods of stylistic dating of ancient art.
Kallistos Alexanderos |