91-year-old woman fills out crossword that turns out to be $116k artwork in German museum

Authored by abc.net.au and submitted by lapapinton
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91-year-old woman fills out crossword that turns out to be $116k artwork in German museum

A 91-year-old woman reportedly used a ballpoint pen to fill in the blank spaces on a $116,000 crossword artwork on display in a German museum.

The work, by avant garde Danish artist Arthur Koepcke was on loan to the Neues Museum in Nuremberg from a private collector, the BBC reported.

The woman, who was visiting the museum with a group of seniors, reportedly told police she was following instructions on a sign next to the artwork, which read: "Insert words".

"The lady told us she had taken the notes as an invitation to complete the crossword," a police spokesman told UK paper The Telegraph.

Museum director Eva Krause said she believed the damage could be easily repaired.

"We do realise that the old lady didn't mean any harm," Ms Krause told The Telegraph.

She said the museum had to make a criminal complaint for insurance reasons.

"We will let the lady know that the collector took the damage to the work in good humour, so she doesn't have a sleepless night," she added.

The Reading-Work-Piece is one of a series of artworks completed by Koepcke in the mid-1960s, according to a post on the National Gallery of Denmark's website written by senior research curator Marianne Torp.

Ms Torp said Koepcke's works included picture puzzles, crosswords and perception psychology tests, painted in oil on canvas and featuring cuttings from newspapers and magazines.

"With his reading and training pieces, the artist wished to increase the spectators' awareness of the systems, actions and rituals that we persist in and carry out every day without reflecting on them," Ms Torp wrote.

It wasn't the first time an artwork has been damaged by hapless viewers.

In June, a young Chinese boy accidentally knocked over a $20,000 Lego sculpture, which had taken three days and nights to put together, just an hour after it was put on display.

Late last year, an artwork in an Italian museum resembling the aftermath of a large party was binned after cleaners mistook it for actual rubbish.

Also in 2015, a 12-year-old punched a hole in a $2 million Italian oil painting after he tripped and fell into the piece at an exhibition in Taiwan.

Doubts were later raised about the painting's authenticity.

In 2012, an elderly parishioner made international headlines when she attempted to restore a fresco of Jesus Christ in a Spanish church.

The painting, Elias Garcia Martinez's Ecce Homo, became an international phenomenon as a result of the botched restoration.

silviazbitch on October 7th, 2017 at 11:14 UTC »

I’d be interested in the reaction of the artist, Arthur Køpcke. Alas, we’ll never know, because he died in 1977. The museum director described the woman’s solution to the puzzle as “damage,” that could easily be “repaired.” I wonder whether Køpcke would’ve taken the opposite view and told them to leave it.

Plot twist! The museum removed the lady’s solution. She now claims copyright infringement and has hired a lawyer. Strange but true- here’s my source.

Edit- the artist was born in 1928, so he and the lady with the pen were contemporaries. I wonder if she knew him back in the day?

mystriddlery on October 7th, 2017 at 09:33 UTC »

I thought she sold her completed crossword puzzle for $116k lol, well thats what you get for not labeling still life art!

ReasonablyBadass on October 7th, 2017 at 09:28 UTC »

She had time to do the entire thing without anyone intervening?