A person would have to be pretty good to fool a lot of us here on this
mailing list when presented with a fake Apple I.  There are certain things
that would give it away.  Not saying it would be impossible but it would be
eventually exposed.  I can't imagine someone who knows art and appraisals
would not know a fake Renoir when he/she saw it, but maybe it's harder to
spot a fake painting or sculpture than a fake Apple I.
Bill
On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 7:05 PM Ethan Dicks via cctalk <
cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
  On Fri, Dec 11, 2020 at 10:05 PM Jim Manley via cctalk
 <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
  It's been estimated by experts that a third
to half of the "original
 artwork", previously valued at a total in the tens of billions in museums
 and collectors' places, are counterfeits. 
 35 years ago I was in Anaheim for DECUS and my work buddy and I met up
 with his family and we went to the Getty Museum.  I had previously
 spent multiple seasons in Greece doing archeological fieldwork, and my
 degree is a BA in History with a Classics specialty.  We walked into
 one large chamber and there was this Koros (youth/Apollo statue) from
 at least the 7th C BC.  I looked at it and said aloud that it had to
 be a fake - it was too good compared to the many I'd seen in museums
 and at sites around Greece.
 Several years later it was revealed to be a very expensive, but well
 executed, forgery.
 -ethan