Disputed
Van Gogh self-portrait is genuine, Dutch research finds
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[January 21, 2020]
By Anthony Deutsch
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A
rare Vincent van Gogh self-portrait, which had been
contested as a forgery for decades, is a genuine work by
the Dutch master, researchers have concluded after six
years of study.
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The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam said on Monday that it was
probably the only known work by Van Gogh painted during a
psychotic episode in the summer of 1889, when he was admitted to
hospital in the French town of Saint Remy.
Van Gogh struggled with mental illness throughout his life and
died in 1890 aged 37 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The painting was acquired by Norway's National Museum in 1910
for 10,000 French francs, which would have been slightly more
than 100,000 euros today based on rough calculations.
The authenticity of the work became a topic of discussion among
experts after an article in an international art publication in
1970 said the color palette and use of a pallet knife differed
too much from other self-portraits.
"This uncertain situation called for action," said Mai Britt
Guleng, curator at Norway's National Museum, which had had the
picture on display. "When we in 2014 delivered the work in the
hands of the experts at the Van Gogh Museum, we had no
expectations."
Van Gogh Museum senior researcher Louis van Tilborgh said a
detailed examination of the work proved skeptics wrong.
"If you examine the painting fully, you see there truly are
similarities to Van Gogh's other work," Van Tilborgh told
journalists during a presentation on the artwork before it went
on display for the general public.
The differences first raised as a cause for doubt in fact
reflect Van Gogh's own efforts to capture his poor mental state
by using darker, or muddied, tones of usually more lively greens
and blues, he said.
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"FRIGHTENED PATIENT"
"We see a frightened patient. Someone who is looking at himself
in the mirror and sees someone who has permanently changed," Van
Tilborgh said. Blurry smears of fresh paint were an attempt to
"make it look less alive", he added.
New technical analysis further revealed that the paint contained
the same pigment used in other Van Gogh paintings. Contrary to
earlier claims, the canvas also matched other works.
Van Gogh even referenced the painting in correspondence after he
had spent six weeks in the French hospital, the Dutch
researchers found.
He called it "an effort during my illness" in a letter to his
brother Theo.
The work will be returned to Oslo after going on display in an
exhibition of portraits called "In the picture", which will open
at Amsterdam's Van Gogh Museum on Feb. 21.
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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