Purveyor of Knowledge and Emerging Publisher of Content and Visually Driven Books

January 30, 2026

Controversial Caravaggio to be unveiled in London

 


Mahon bought The Cardsharps for £50,400 (est £20,000-£30,000) when it came up for auction at Sotheby’s, London in 2006, ascribed to a 17th-century “follower” of the artist. Mahon believed it to be by the master

Controversial Caravaggio to be unveiled in London
Questions about attribution remain over The Cardsharps, once owned by the late Italian Baroque specialist Denis Mahon

by Martin Bailey

 
March 2013–A controversial Caravaggio that belonged to the late collector and scholar Denis Mahon is due to be unveiled in April at the Museum of the Order of St John in London. Although the rest of Mahon’s 58 Italian Baroque paintings have been bequeathed to UK public collections, the long-term future of The Cardsharps is uncertain, because of the question of attribution.
The Cardsharps came up for sale at Sotheby’s, London in 2006, ascribed to a 17th-century “follower” of the artist and estimated at between £20,000 and £30,000. Mahon bought it for £50,400 (the hammer price was £42,000), believing it to be by the master. The seller, Lancelot William Thwaytes, is now taking legal action against Sotheby’s because of its alleged misattribution, but the claim is being robustly rejected by the auction house. 

After Mahon acquired The Cardsharps he offered it on loan to the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. The museum was willing to accept it, but only if the label read “attributed to Caravaggio”, and this was rejected by him.

Instead he lent the picture to Italy—to Trapani, Forlì and then Cento. It was at the Pinacoteca di Cento last May when the earthquake struck, and the gallery was damaged (it remains closed). For export and insurance purposes, Mahon’s loan was valued at £10m. Its UK temporary export licence expired in July 2012, but there were problems with the bureaucracy in getting the necessary Italian export papers, and it did not arrive back in Britain until last October.

When The Cardsharps was bought, ownership was shared between Mahon and his close friend, Orietta Benocci Adam. She is now the sole owner, following Mahon’s death in 2011 at the age of 100.

The Caravaggio attribution remains controversial. It is accepted by some key Italian scholars, including Antonio Paolucci, the director of the Vatican Museums, and Mina Gregori, a Florentine specialist. Others reject it, regarding it as a copy of the authentic version (around 1595), which is at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth. Sebastian Schütze, a professor of history of art at the University of Vienna, states in his recent catalogue raisonné that the quality of execution of the Mahon work “suggests the painting to be a copy”. 

Mahon required that The Cardsharps should be on public view. The Museum of the Order of St John is an appropriate venue, since Caravaggio was a member of the Catholic order of the Knights of St John. 

The price of The Cardsharps was almost exactly the same as the £50,000 estimate of what Mahon spent on the rest of his collection, which he began to assemble in the 1930s. The 58 works are now worth around £100m—an indication of rising prices for Italian Baroque pictures.

Source: The Art Newspaper
Published online: 28 March 2013



The Quiapo and Pakil of Danny Dalena
The Quiapo and Pakil of Danny Dalena
December 2015--Danny Dalena appeared with a bang in the early seventies. He first made his mark with a brilliant and caustic political cartoons and illustrations for the Free Press Philippine Leader which gave new life t...
lee mas...
The Angono Petroglyphs
The Angono Petroglyphs
The Angono PetroglyphS by: Teta Limcangco     The Angono Petroglyph is a recent archeological breakthrough during the 80’s found in the mountainside of Angono and Binangonan by Carlo “Botong” Francisco....
lee mas...
Accustomed Othering in Colonial Writing
Accustomed Othering in Colonial Writing
September 2015--There are at least three major discursive issues that can be extracted from the document, Customs of the Tagalogs written by Juan de Plasencia in 1589, if we are to put socio-political context into the te...
lee mas...
The Deviant Artist Costantino Zicarelli
The Deviant Artist Costantino Zicarelli
December 2008 - - Costantino Zicarelli belongs to the new generation of artists whose paintings are difficult to like but harder to ignore. His art differs from the standards as he chooses to paint the d...
lee mas...
Matisse sets new 49-million-dollar record
Matisse sets new 49-million-dollar record
A large bronze sculpture of a woman's back by Henri Matisse has sold for nearly 49 million dollars in New York, setting a new record for the French impressionist. Measuring 74.5 inches (189.2 cm), "Nu de dos" wa...
lee mas...
Bonifacio Nicolas Cristobal: Rediscovering a Forgotten Great
Bonifacio Nicolas Cristobal: Rediscovering a Forgotten Great
June 2012-- Bonifacio Cristobal’s artistic influence was as great as his contemporaries. He began his painting career in 1937 after obtaining a Certificate in Painting from the UP School of Fine Arts. Upon his gr...
lee mas...
Antique "Santos" Are Much More Than Folk Art
March 2015--When the Spaniards arrived in the Philippines with sword and cross in hand some four centuries ago, they brought with them  the art of religious image-making. The first “santo” on Philippine soil was a...
lee mas...
Unique Tombs found in the Philippines
Unique Tombs found in the Philippines
 MANILA, Philippines — Archaeologists have unearthed remnants of what they believe is a 1,000-year-old village on a jungle-covered mountaintop in the Philippines with limestone coffins of a type never before found in...
lee mas...
Daniel de la Cruz's Touchstone of Modern Sculpture
Daniel de la Cruz's Touchstone of Modern Sculpture
January-February 2011 -- Many of the artists who emerged in 2006 found themselves pursuing a career in painting. But Daniel de la Cruz, who turned forty that year, actively turned his thoughts towards his dream of becoming...
lee mas...
Brief Sketch of the History of Plastic-Graphic Arts in the Philippines (Second of Two Parts)
Brief Sketch of the History of Plastic-Graphic Arts in the Philippines (Second of Two Parts)
September 2013--In sculpture, we are face to face with a problem more difficult perhaps than that which we have encountered in the consideration of Philippines architecture, considering the fact that there is scarcity of auth...
lee mas...