The Herald

Experts attribute £300,000 work to painter who denied creating it

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AN early Lucian Freud painting worth at least £300,000 has been identified despite the artist’s own denials that it was his work.

Fake Or Fortune, presented by Fiona Bruce and art historian Philip Mould on BBC One, has attributed the painting to the acclaimed portrait artist who died in 2011.

London-based designer Jon Turner inherited the work from two artist friends, who told him it was an early portrait painted by Freud when he was at art school in 1939. Experts at auction house Christie’s identified it as a painting by Freud in 1985, but the artist denied it was his work.

However, Bruce and Mould had a breakthrou­gh when they spoke to the artist’s former solicitor, who found a note in her files of a phone conversati­on with Freud about the painting.

During that phone call in 2006, Freud apparently said he had started the painting, but it had actually been completed by someone else. For this reason, he would not acknowledg­e it as his own work. But when experts analysed techniques and materials used in the painting, they declared that it was the work of a single artist.

A panel of three Freud experts said they believed the painting was by the artist himself, likely from 1939.

Mr Mould, who valued the painting at £300,000 or more, said: “It was a novel and gargantuan task to overturn the reported views of the artist.

“It was different from anything we’d taken on until now – we had never had to arm-wrestle with the words of an artist beyond the grave.

“It was all the more frustratin­g as the more I worked on the picture and Fiona was able to add the background with her inquiries, the more I felt confident about it being entirely by Freud.”

 ??  ?? LUCIAN FREUD: Denied the painting was his work.
LUCIAN FREUD: Denied the painting was his work.

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