Misattributed, Misattribution Público Deposited

Definición
  • Misattributed, Misattribution.  An error of attribution, authentication or cataloging; misclassifying a numismatic item. The error is usually due to inexperience of the cataloger, who probably had not seen a similar specimen before. Accurate attribution requires wide knowledge, both of numismatics, technical aspects of production, plus a knowledge of history, language, and the period of the piece being cataloged. Misattribution is uncalled for and a disservice to the reader, client, owner, estate, auction house, museum or whomever the attribution is prepared for. See attribution, cataloging.

        

    [[ Photo Medal & Clipping Comparette C4 {1912} 376:271 ]]

    Example of Misattribution                                                             ` Cataloging the United States coin and medal

    collection was ot easy for Thomas Lewis Comparette,

    curator, while the collection wa still at the U.S.

    Mint in Philadelphia (in 1926 it was transferre

    to the Smithsonian). His published catalog of 1912

    contained many errors.

    Perhaps the worst example is attributing the

    Washington Declaration of Independence Medal (Baker  

    53) to the Signing Centennial of 1876. He attributed 

    it correctly to George Washington and the scene is   

    the Signing of the Declaration of Independence and   

    the artist was Wright – all because these appear on 

    the medal. But the date, the era, was wrong. It was   

    created a quarter century before 1876 because the    

    engraver, Charles Cushing Wright, had died in 1854!  

    excerpted with permission from

    An Encyclopedia of Coin and Medal Technology

    For Artists, Makers, Collectors and Curators

    COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY D. WAYNE JOHNSON

    Roger W. Burdette, Editor

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