How The Brain Tells Real From Fake: From Fine Art To Fine Wine

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"If I'm allowed to have a favorite forger, which I know sounds a little bit funny, it would be Eric Hebborn, who's really the prince of art forgers," Noah Charney says. "He's the only one of over sixty that I look at in my book who I think is at the same level as the artists he forged."

This week on Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam explores how we tell real from fake, when it comes to fine art and fine wine. As Noah Charney, author of The Art of Forgeryexplains, the primary motivation for many of the forgers he studied is not money, but revenge.

"[Hebborn] initially had been a failed artist; he couldn't get traction with his own original artworks, even though he had some serious talent," Charney says.

Hebborn had been at a flea market, and purchased some drawings that he thought might be worth something. He brought them to an art gallery in London, and sold them for a profit. But then he walked past the same gallery and saw the drawings on sale for much more than what he was paid.

"He felt that he had been essentially swindled by the gallery and decided to get revenge," Charney says. Thus he began his career as one of the greatest art forgers of all time.

"If he creates a drawing, and the experts think that it's by a great master, then he can convince himself that he must be as good as the master," Charney says. "But the second part is, that if he's able to fool these so-called experts, he demonstrates how foolish they are, and the implication is that they were foolish not to endorse his own original artwork."

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