They say good artists borrow and great artists steal, and Joshua Fardon makes that thrillingly literal in this captivating historical yarn. The play gets at some big ideas about the value of art--how a work's value is determined by how much someone is willing to pay for it, how our emotional attachments allow us to create our own truths. All art is forgery in its own way, the play suggests, so is William Ireland any less of an artist than Shakespeare, himself as much an invention as a real man? What does "authenticity" mean, anyway?
They say good artists borrow and great artists steal, and Joshua Fardon makes that thrillingly literal in this captivating historical yarn. The play gets at some big ideas about the value of art--how a work's value is determined by how much someone is willing to pay for it, how our emotional attachments allow us to create our own truths. All art is forgery in its own way, the play suggests, so is William Ireland any less of an artist than Shakespeare, himself as much an invention as a real man? What does "authenticity" mean, anyway?