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HAN VAN MEEGEREN

Meegeren (Henricus van) was the most successful and the most influential art
forger ever. The specialty of Meegeren was Vermeer. With his fakes after Vermeer
he amassed a fortune worth more than half a billion dollars in today’s currency.
After the Meegeren exposure in 1945, a wave of self-criticism surged through the
world’s art museums and many an Old Master or a Vermeer disappeared from their
walls.

AIM

This website is meant for people who are interested in the Meegeren case, or are
already familiar with van Meegeren. The aim of the site is threefold:

 1. The website intends to be a Meegeren platform for anybody who wants to see
    newly discovered Meegeren pictures or  wants to have Meegeren discussions.
    Please click on the link NEWS.
     
 2. The website gives a survey of books on van Meegeren and shows his pictures.
    Please click on BIBLIOGRAPHY for this review.
     
 3. The website also contains a site “How do I recognize a Meegeren fake?”
    Anybody who owns a Meegeren and has doubts about its authenticity can click
    on the link ?FAKE? and see whether he
    owns a genuine Meegeren.

Director and chief restorer of Museum Boymans in Rotterdam admiring the newly
discovered Emmaus by Johannes Vermeer that eight years later would appear to be
a fake made by Han van Meegeren.

 

 

LINKS
Van Meegeren in the English Wikipedia
Van Meegeren and his student's town Delft
Van Meegeren in the Fake Art Museum
Van Meegeren in the Wikipedia in his native tongue
Quiz: Vermeer or Meegeren?
 

T H E : S T O R Y : O F : H A N : V A N : M E E G E R E N
Han van Meegeren (1889) studied architecture in Delft, the town of Johannes
Vermeer. He broke off his studies to become an artist-painter, but before doing
so he designed a boathouse for his rowing club in Delft. This club-house became
the only architectural design Van Meegeren ever made. It still exists as can be
seen in the picture below.

 

 

 

After a difficult start, living in poverty, he became a popular portraitist,
painting portraits for the upper class in the royal city of The Hague.
Many fine portraits of this period still exist and are the proud possession of
the present owners.
The portrait of his wife Jo, below, is a fine example of these portraits. With
its height of over 70 cm (about 30 inch) it is impressive as well.

 

 

 

 

Van Meegeren was not satisfied with his success. He wanted to be valued as an
artist of genius, not as a mere portrait painter. In 1932 he left for the South
of France and worked there for many years at a fake Vermeer, a fake to become
the most famous forgery ever.
This was the “Emmaus”, purchased by the art museum Boymans in Rotterdam,
Holland. For many years it was considered the finest Vermeer ever made.
In the self-portrait below Van Meegeren is seen to paint his “Emmaus”.

 

 

 

 

In 1945, some weeks after the conclusion of World War II, Van Meegeren was
arrested because of another Vermeer; one he had sold to Hermann Goering, the
second in command of the Nazi Reich.
For fear of being accused of collaborating with the Nazis he confessed that he
had made this Vermeer himself.
“It is a fake,” he told his interrogators.
At the same time he confessed having made the famous “Emmaus” as well and
admitted several other fake-Vermeers, as well as fakes of other Old Masters of
great repute.

One of these Old Masters was the Frans Hals pastiche “The Witch of Haarlem”
shown below (At the left-hand side the original by Frans Hals is shown, at the
right is Van Meegeren’s interpretation).

Van Meegeren became world famous overnight. Not as the genius he regarded
himself, but as the greatest art-forger ever. He also became known as “the man
who swindled Goering”.
Ever since his name is a horror to museum directors, and a joy for his fans who
like to collect the works he made under his own name. Examples of these works
are shown in the gallery below.
Van Meegeren died in December 1947, just before serving a year’s sentence for
forgery.

This HERTJE (Deer or Fawn) is the most famous of his works under his OWN name.
It was made in 1921 and sold by the thousands as a copper print in 1927. One in
five households in Holland were said to have this little Hertje on their walls.

 

 






"Rembrandtje" (A small Rembrandt)

Han van Meegeren made this drawing of a country-inn, with a goose-quill, in the
style of Rembrandt. He was studying architecture in Delft when he made this
picture.
The picture is not a fake – Han van Meegeren signed it with his full name – it
is his own interpretation of the style of Rembrandt.





St. Laurens Kerk" in Rotterdam

When still a student Han van Meegeren won a first prize in an art competition of
his University. His interior of this church was highly esteemd.

 

 

 

 




Nachtlokaal" (Night Club created in 1924)

This work is not only a nice picture of Paris’ night-life but it is also a
fitting picture of Han van Meegeren’s personality. He loved wining, dining,
women and smoking.



 

 

 

 



"Self portrait" Age about 35

There is sadness here in Han van Meegeren's face, mixed with a zest for life.
Only a painter able to see past the outer appearance of his model can make such
a revealing picture of himself