Róbert Berény’s avant-garde masterpiece, Sleeping Lady With A Black Vase, hangs in the background of Stuart Little. via
This year we saw museum-goers with the power to x-ray paintings on their phones, algorithms that could beat an art historian, and an easel that could probe artworks with hyperspectral imaging. From lost mosaics and never-before-seen underpaintings, to fresh insights on an artist's creative process, and even mind-boggling theories that reveal new threads of history, 2014 was a fruitful year for curious findings.
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This is the Year in Art Discoveries:+ The Mona Lisa’s alleged twin made her public debut in Singapore this week. According to its owners, scientific tests and expert analyses confirmed that the work is 10 years older than its famous sister.
+ We questioned if van Gogh was murdered after reading the case made by his biographers and a leading forensic scientist.+ Reflective light technology showed that Leonardo da Vinci layered three different versions of his Lady with an Ermine atop one another.
+ We learned that 40,000-year-old hand paintings found in Indonesia predated the oldest art by a few thousand years. Weeks later, a zigzag doodle on a shell—made 300,000 years before human evolution—took over as the new oldest art.
+ A rare Shakespeare first folio surfaced in a public library in Saint-Omer, France.+ Around 1,400 masterpieces, including ones by Claude Monet and Pablo Picasso, were confiscated from the home of the son of a Nazi-era art dealer.
+ Only a single clip of Disney’s first Christmas film had been saved in MoMa’s archives, but the complete work was found on an unlabeled reel in Norway’s National Library earlier this month.+ We discovered Banksy was a woman (maybe). But, at least we eliminated Paul William Horner this year from our list of possible Banksys.+ Previously unknown Warhol works were discovered on floppy disks from 1985, thanks to Cory Arcangel, a team from Carnegie Mellon, and the Andy Warhol Foundation.
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