The oil painting of an agonized Christ,
currently attributed to an unknown peer of 17th century Spaniard
Jose de Ribera, was slated for auction in Madrid earlier this
month with a guide price of 1,500 euros ($1,815).
But Spain blocked the sale at the last minute after experts
suggested it might have been the work of Michelangelo Merisi da
Caravaggio, whose works can fetch millions.
Jorge Coll, head of Colnaghi gallery which the owners hired to
examine the claims, restore the painting and potentially sell
it, described its "magnetic" quality and recalled how his first
glimpse left an impression he rarely felt when viewing art.
Determining its authorship through scrutinising historical
documents and bringing in external experts will take time, he
told Reuters at one of the gallery's headquarters in Madrid.
"The public has waited 400 years to see it, they can wait
another year ... It's a matter of doing our job correctly," he
said, adding that the painting was safe in an undisclosed
location in Madrid.
The investigation is already bearing fruit.
A document found in the Spanish Royal Academy of Fine Arts shows
how an ancestor of the owners, Evaristo Perez de Castro,
acquired the work in exchange for an Alonso Cano in 1823.
Coll would not speculate on how much the painting could be worth
if proven to be a Caravaggio, and said the owners were now more
interested in attribution and restoration than a sale.
"When this kind of work comes to market it is very difficult to
determine what is going to be the final price," he said.
He pointed to the example of Caravaggio's "Judith and Holofernes",
which was valued at 150 million euros when it came up for sale
in 2019 after being discovered in a French attic. It sold to a
mystery buyer for an undisclosed price.
Spain has the option of matching the market price if it wants to
keep the work in the country.
(Reporting by Emma Pinedo, Guillermo Martinez and Elena
Rodriguez; Editing by Nathan Allen and Mike Collett-White)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content
|
|