deattribution
See also: de-attribution
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
deattribute + -ion
Noun
deattribution (plural deattributions)
- Discontinuance of attributing a work of art or literature, etc. to a particular creator, especially in a case where a work is reassigned from a prominent creator to a lesser or unknown creator.
- 1986 September 30, Douglas C. McGill, “Met to Relabel 2 of Its ‘Rembrandts’”, in New York Times, retrieved 25 September 2015:
- Deattribution of Rembrandt paintings has been going on among art historians for decades, constantly winnowing a corpus inflated by the 17th- and 18th-century practice of regarding many works simply in Rembrandt's style as "by the master."
- 2006, W. Stanley Taft Jr., James W. Mayer, The Science of Paintings, →ISBN, page 9:
- Attributions, deattributions, and reattributions are often more easily made after reviewing x-radiographs, infrared reflectograms, dendrochronological data, and pigment analyses.
- 2009 April 24, “A Dead Soldier (17th century), Anonymous Italian”, in Independent, UK, retrieved 25 September 2015:
- [I]n the world of art, authors are always dying off. Works that were previously assigned to a known name, works that were among the most famous, find themselves stranded in anonymity. The process is called de-attribution.
Related terms
Further reading
- “deattribution”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.