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Science Diction

Cobalt

Science Diction

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Friday, Society & Culture, Science, Origin, Culture, Words, History, Word, Language

4.8 • 610 Ratings

🗓️ 10 March 2020

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Cobalt has been hoodwinking people since the day it was pried from the earth. Named after a pesky spirit from German folklore, trickery is embedded in its name.   In 1940s Netherlands, cobalt lived up to its name in a big way, playing a starring role in one of the most embarrassing art swindles of the 19th century. It’s a story of duped Nazis, a shocking court testimony, and one fateful mistake. Want to stay up to speed with Science Diction? Sign up for our newsletter. The infamous Han van Meegeren, hard at work. (Wikimedia Commons) Guest:  Kassia St. Clair is a writer and cultural historian based in London. Footnotes And Further Reading:  For fascinating histories on every color you can imagine, read Kassia St. Clair’s The Secret Lives of Color. Thanks to Jennifer Culver for background information on the kobold. Read more about Han van Meegeren in The Forger’s Spell by Edward Dolnick and in the 2009 series “Bamboozling Ourselves” in the New York Times. Credits:  Science Diction is written and produced by Johanna Mayer, with production and editing help from Elah Feder. Our senior editor is Christopher Intagliata, with story editing help from Nathan Tobey. Our theme song and music are by Daniel Peterschmidt. We had fact-checking help from Michelle Harris, and mixing help from Kaitlyn Schwalje. Special thanks to the entire Science Friday staff.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, everybody, one quick thing before we get started. We want to know what you think about this series.

0:06.6

So please, do us a favor, fill out a quick survey at sciencefriiday.com slash science diction survey.

0:15.9

Thanks. Here's the episode.

0:18.0

In a storage room in the Netherlands, tucked away inside a wire cage,

0:23.3

there's this painting.

0:26.6

It's called Christ and the Adulterus.

0:29.8

Jesus is cloaked in a simple, deep blue robe,

0:33.7

and he stands over a woman whose head is bent.

0:37.3

Jesus' eyes are hooded, and he's lifting a single finger.

0:42.0

There was a time when it seemed like everyone was talking about this painting.

0:48.7

If history had gone differently, it would probably be hanging in a museum right now,

0:53.9

instead of collecting dust in the storage room.

0:57.5

But there was something about the way that the artist painted those deep blue robes that Jesus was

1:04.1

wearing that caused that painting to be sealed up in that wire cage. It was a particular pigment called cobalt blue.

1:13.7

And the artist would have cobalt to thank for his downfall and his saving grace.

1:20.3

From Science Friday, this is science diction.

1:23.3

I'm Johanna Mayer.

1:24.6

Today, we're talking about the word cobalt.

1:43.5

In the 1500s, German miners encountered a particularly pesky ore.

1:50.0

When it came out of the ground, it had this metallic sheen.

1:54.0

It was almost glittery.

1:56.0

And it looked kind of like silver, which seems like excellent luck.

...

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