Once-believed fake, painting now declared real-deal Van Gogh

Studio 360

There are not many artists, maybe none, with quite the star power of Vincent Van Gogh.

Partly it’s the story: the mad genius, uncelebrated in his day, who had the ultimate posthumous reversal of fortune. But largely it’s the paintings he left behind when he died in 1890: singular, ahead of their time, emotional, but sensual and easy to love.

So the announcement this week, by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, that there’s a new Van Gogh painting has stirred quite a bit of interest.

Sunset at Montmajour is a winter sunset scene that was declared a fake 80 years ago and stowed away in a disappointed collector’s attic.

Teio Meedendorp, a researcher with the Van Gogh Museum, says a team from the museum has been examining the work for two years, since the current owners brought it, based on a tip from someone who knew the setting depicted.

The discipline of art conservation and attribution has improved vastly in recent decades, but in this case, old-fashioned detective work played a lead role in ruling this painting the real deal.

“We recognized it from a critic who saw an exhibition in 1892 in Amsterdam. We found a newspaper clipping," Meedendorp said. "And then again we found a new exhibition in 1901, also in the Netherlands. And of course the nicest fitting provenance is the one you can almost trace back to the easel of the painter, and that’s what happened in this case.”

Major Van Goghs sell for tens of millions of dollars — as high as $82.5 million, in 1990.

But just who struck it rich will remain unknown. The lucky owners of Sunset at Montmajour have chosen to remain anonymous.

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