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A Modern Masterpiece for £35?

Episode 3 of 4

When a keen art blogger picked up a £35 bargain at auction, he started to suspect he’d found a missing work by Frances Hodgkins. Can the team prove his hunch was right?

Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould investigate a mysterious unsigned landscape that was snapped up at auction for just £35. Could it be a lost work by Frances Hodgkins, the trailblazing New Zealand-born artist who became one of the most original voices in British modernism?

Art blogger Robjn Cantus was browsing an online auction when he spotted a group of pictures that caught his interest. He bought the lot for £35, shared images of the artworks online, and received an intriguing tip-off from a reader. They suggested that one of the mystery paintings could be the work of Frances Hodgkins, whose vibrant, avant-garde style helped reshape the British art scene between the wars. If it’s genuine, it could be worth as much as £50,000.

Robjn turns to the Fake or Fortune team for help, but admits that his initial impression of the striking, colourful picture was that it might have been painted by a schoolchild. He has a hunch that the artwork was part of a post-war scheme called Pictures for Schools, which placed original art in classrooms to inspire young minds. But how Pictures for Schools could have acquired the painting remains a puzzle. With no signature, scant provenance, and another name attached, Robjn’s picture poses one of the team’s most challenging investigations yet.

Fiona and Philip follow a trail that leads from school archives in Hertfordshire to the gold mines of rural south Wales, and to a 1943 wartime exhibition in London, where Hodgkins exhibited her work alongside none other than Pablo Picasso.

Working with leading experts in both the UK and New Zealand, the team turns to cutting-edge forensic analysis, including pigment testing carried out in collaboration with the Auckland Art Gallery - home to the world’s largest collection of Hodgkins’s work. But with little documentation and only a fleeting mention of Robjn’s picture on the same inventory page as Hodgkins’s name, is the evidence strong enough to convince the experts?

The final call lies with Mary Kisler, the foremost authority on Frances Hodgkins. Could this schoolroom curiosity really be a £50,000 missing masterpiece, or just a case of mistaken identity?

Release date:

58 minutes

On TV

Next Monday 21:00

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Fiona Bruce
Presenter Philip Mould
Series Editor Robert Murphy
Series Producer Sebastian Barfield
Production Manager Kate Roberts

Broadcasts

How to contact us

How to contact us

Get in touch if you think you have a lost masterpiece.