Sleuth: The Amazing Quest for Lost Art Treasures
CSI meets Who Do You Think You Are? meets Time Team meets The Antiques Roadshow. Two-dimensional works of art become three-dimensional thrillers.
Philip Mould is an international art dealer who has lived the high stakes game of art sleuthing for twenty years. In Sleuth, we encounter the fascinating dealers, experts, auctioneers and restorers who risk fortunes and reputations to turn overlooked artworks into coveted treasures.
Sleuth is laced with dramas:
• Gainsborough’s earliest picture emerges in a Los Angeles saleroom – the author has three days to find the missing facts and decide what to pay.
• The most powerful man in the art establishment, with the influence to elevate a copy into a priceless original, is asked to look at a ‘fake’ Rembrandt self portrait: if he says yes a £5,000 picture turns into £5 million masterpiece.
• A Vermont professor unlocks the door of a defunct Catholic church to reveal a hidden cache of 300 portraits.
• An auctioneer notices from the upper story of a bus that Damien Hirst’s restaurant is being dismantled. He swoops in and sells the fixtures and fittings for £13 million.
Sleuth is a series of stories which not only reveals the extraordinary culture of detection but the people behind it. Paintings and their discovery become a way into the minds, preoccupations and professions of a raft of influential figures beyond the commercial and museum façade – men and women who have shaped their lives in pursuit of truth and profit through art.
”'Reviewing can make you hate books - the grim spectre of the copy deadline means that other tasks (cleaning the fridge is popular) can seem attractive compared with just getting on reading the book. Sleuth was different. I could not wait to get back to it” - Sunday Telegraph
”'timely … exciting” - Country Life
‘a fast-paced and fascinating account of the race to uncover ‘lost’ treasures’ Independent on Sunday -
”'this absorbing and fast-paced narrative … an extremely enjoyable read” - British Art Journal
”'This is no dry treatise and Mould is a first-class scene setter … There is an immediacy to much of the writing, which draws the reader in … the sort of book that may well do more to attract future talent to the world of art dealing than any number of university art history courses” - Antiques Trade Gazette