Johannes Vermeer created only a few dozen paintings in his lifetime, while other major 17th-century artists cranked out 10 times that. That helped a mediocre Dutch painter create convincing forgeries in the 20th century, NPR reports in a look at a new book on one of art's great hoaxes and its undoing.
Han van Meegeren perfected a technique to artificially age his paintings, using melted plastic and a pizza oven, and painted with intentional inaccuracy so as to avoid close inspection by art experts. His fakes were wildly popular among art lovers and historians, as well as Germany's second-most-powerful Nazi, whom van Meegeren took particular pleasure in duping. (More painting stories.)