Pistol
that Van Gogh used to shoot himself sells for $145,000
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[June 20, 2019] By
Rachel Joyner
PARIS (Reuters) - The gun
Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh is believed to have used
to commit suicide in France in 1890, shooting himself in
the chest after years of mental anguish, sold for
130,000 euros ($145,700) at auction in Paris on
Wednesday.
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An anonymous phone bidder took home the Lefaucheux revolver, its
casing heavily rusted and the inlay of the curved handle
missing, for more than double the highest estimate put on it by
experts at auction house Drouot.
"It is a very emblematic piece," said auctioneer Gregoire Veyres.
"The fact that it's a gun, it's an object of death. And if Van
Gogh is Van Gogh, it's because of his suicide and this gun is
part of it."
Van Gogh suffered bouts of psychosis and deep depression
throughout his life, with his torment often infusing his art,
whether intensely painted self portraits or other notable works
including The Starry Night and Sunflowers.
He is also notorious for having chopped off part of his own left
ear with a razor blade during an argument with fellow artist
Paul Gauguin.
Van Gogh died at Auvers-sur-Oise near Paris in July 1890, aged
just 37, more than two days after shooting himself in the chest
in a wheat field where he had previously painted.
After failing to kill himself instantly, he stumbled back to the
inn where he was staying and was looked after by the innkeeper,
Arthur Ravoux, and his daughter Adeline, who was 13 at the time
and recounted the events more than 60 years later.
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"I have tried to kill myself," Van Gogh is reputed to have told
Ravoux. The artist had spent more than two months at the inn,
producing a whirlwind of some 80 paintings in what would be his
final, distraught flurry of creativity.
Searches for the gun began the day after he died but the likely
weapon was not found until the 1960s, in the same field, with the
correct caliber and showing indications that it had been fired.
It was discovered by a farmer and ended up in the possession of a
woman whose child was the seller.
"There are lot of indicators that favor its attribution," said
Veyres.
Exhaustive efforts to confirm the gun's link to Van Gogh, including
tests that established it had been buried for 50 to 80 years, led to
a 2012 book.
A similar Lefaucheux revolver used by Paul Verlaine to try to kill
his lover and fellow poet Arthur Rimbaud in 1873 was sold at auction
in Paris in 2016, fetching 434,500 euros.
(Writing by Rachel Joyner; Editing by Luke Baker and John
Stonestreet)
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