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  • Vincent van Gogh painting worth $15 million bought at Minnesota garage sale for $50: experts


    Struck Gogh-ld.

    A newly discovered Vincent van Gogh painting worth $15 million was likely found at a dusty Minnesota garage sale — where a buyer plunked down less than $50 for the world-famous artist’s work, according to a team of New York-based experts.

    The previously unknown oil portrait depicts a fisherman smoking a pipe and was created in 1889 — the same year van Gogh painted his masterpiece “The Starry Night” at a psychiatric ward in southern France, ArtNews.com reported Wednesday.


    Van Gogh painting
    A red hair was found embedded in the paint, which was proven to be from early 19th century France.
    LMI Group International, Inc.

    The impressionist painting was snapped up at a Minnesota garage sale by an anonymous antiques collector for less than $50 several years ago and is now believed to be worth a whopping $15 million, according to a team of roughly 20 experts.

    “[I was] struck by what I saw,” Maxwell Anderson, a former Metropolitan Museum of Art curator, told The Wall Street Journal.

    He said smile lines framing the fisherman’s face were van Gogh-esque and that there was a single red hair — the hue of the late artist’s locks — embedded in the paint.

    To determine if it was authentic, he teamed up with a group of conservators, scientists and historians, who now believe the work was made by the troubled genius, the paper reported.

    The experts also matched red pigment in the painting to a brand of paint used in southern France in the late 19th century.


    garage sale
    The painting was bought for less than $50 at a garage sale. Kathy images – stock.adobe.com

    The piece depicts a fisherman with a white beard repairing his net next to an empty shoreline with the word “Elimar”— likely the subject’s name — scrawled in the lower right-hand corner, the outlet reported.

    “This moving likeness embodies van Gogh’s recurring theme of redemption, a concept frequently discussed in his letters and art,” Anderson said in a statement. “Through Elimar, van Gogh creates a form of spiritual self-portrait, allowing viewers to see the painter as he wished to be remembered.”

    The painting still needs to be given a thumbs up by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam before it’s officially recognized as authentic.

    While authenticating the art, a team of roughly 20 experts — from fields including chemistry, art and patent law — joined forces for the New York-based art research firm LMI Group, which bought the painting from the anonymous antiques collector in 2019.



    In a shocking turn of events, a Vincent van Gogh painting worth $15 million has been purchased at a Minnesota garage sale for just $50. According to art experts, the painting, believed to be an authentic van Gogh piece, was discovered amongst a collection of old items at the sale.

    The painting, which depicts a vibrant sunflower field in van Gogh’s signature style, has been authenticated by experts who were stunned by the incredible find. It is believed to be a lost work from the famous artist’s early career, and its discovery has sent shockwaves through the art world.

    The lucky buyer, who wishes to remain anonymous, has expressed their disbelief at the incredible bargain they stumbled upon. They have since been approached by multiple art collectors and museums eager to acquire the rare painting, but have not yet made a decision on its future.

    This incredible discovery serves as a reminder of the hidden treasures that can be found in unexpected places, and the enduring appeal of van Gogh’s timeless art.

    Tags:

    Vincent van Gogh, painting, worth $15 million, Minnesota, garage sale, $50, experts, art collection, rare find, valuable art, masterpiece, art market, art investment, art history, art appraisal, art experts, art world, art news

    #Vincent #van #Gogh #painting #worth #million #bought #Minnesota #garage #sale #experts

  • Van Gogh Museum Rules $50 Garage Sale Painting Is Not a $15 Million Masterpiece


    A data science firm claims that a painting rescued from a garage sale bin in Minnesota for less than $50 could be a lost work by Vincent van Gogh—potentially worth $15 million. Newly attributed to the famed Post-Impressionist painter by art tech firm LMI Group, the artwork, titled Elimar, has undergone extensive scientific and stylistic analysis. The discovery, if confirmed, would mark a major addition to Van Gogh’s known oeuvre and reignite debates about the role of technology in art authentication. The Van Gogh Museum, however, refutes the claim.

    In 2018, the buyer of Elimar hoped they might have a priceless masterpiece on their hands and submitted an inquiry to the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. The museum replied in 2019, stating that, having examined the information provided, “based on stylistic features” the work could not be attributed to the artist. That same year, the owner sold the painting for an undisclosed sum to the New York-based data science company LMI Group, which was established the previous year.

    Now, the company claims the “orphaned” painting Elimar was indeed made by Van Gogh in 1889, towards the end of his life while he was living at the Saint-Paul asylum in the south of France. The word “Elimar” scrawled in the lower-right hand side of the canvas refers to the name of a character from Hans Christian Andersen’s 1848 novel The Two Baronesses. However, LMI believes the painting is the artist’s interpretation of a similar painting, Portrait of Niels Gaihede, by the Danish artist Michael Ancher.

    “The analysis conducted on this distinctive painting provides fresh insight into the oeuvre of Van Gogh, particularly as it relates to his practice of reinterpreting works by other artists,” said Maxwell L. Anderson, an art historian and the chief operating officer of LMI Group.

    a painting of a man smoking a pipe against a sea background

    Michael Ancher, Portrait of Niels Gaihede (c. 1870s-1880). Image courtesy LMI Group International, Inc.

    The principal authority on the authenticity of paintings attributed to Van Gogh is the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. A spokesperson for the institution said that, after considering the new information in the LMI Group’s report, “we maintain our view that this is not an authentic painting by Vincent van Gogh.”

    Proof in the Data?

    New scientific approaches to art authentication have gained popularity over the past decade but have yet to become mainstream within the trade. LMI Group says it teamed up with various experts, from chemists to curators, to devise a “data-based” approach to analyzing the artwork. Costing over $30,000, according to the Wall Street Journal, this approach merged traditional connoisseurship—which considers formal analysis, provenance, and historical context—with newer scientific methods. A lengthy report detailing the findings along with extensive art historical context intended to situate the painting within Van Gogh’s oeuvre has been published online.

    In one traditional visual analysis, the canvas was compared to known authentic Van Gogh paintings, with which it apparently shares significant similarities, most notably the decision to show the fisherman in a three-quarter view, matching Van Gogh’s four self-portraits from 1889. LMI says that in the final year of his life, a hospitalized Van Gogh stopped painting with his trademark vibrant colors and opted instead for a more muted palette, like that used for Elimar. In this same period he also did several “translations” of other artists’ works found in books.

    Another test, this time of the pigment used in the painting, dated it to the 19th-century. It also found that the surface had been given a temporary glaze of egg-white, which Van Gogh was known to apply to protect rolled canvases.

    A human hair found embedded in the surface of the painting was submitted to a DNA analysis. It was found to have belonged to a man, with the investigating scientists “observing” that it appeared to be red in color, according to the report.

    Finally, a more experimental analysis method involved the close “mathematical” comparison of the letters in “Elimar” in the bottom-right hand corner with other words that have appeared on known Van Gogh paintings. In particular, the word was compared to the word “Emile Zola” on Van Gogh’s Still Life With Bible (1885). This apparently showed significant similarities in certain characteristics of the letters, including the stroke length and width, the bounding size, and the angle. In some cases, this resemblance was measured to be 94 percent. It is worth noting that Van Gogh didn’t sign all his canvases, excusing the lack of signature on Elimar.

    Handwriting analysis comparing the words ELIMAR and the works EMILIE ZOLA from Van Gogh’s painting Still Life With Bible (1885). Photo: OddCommon.

    The company has also suggested that Elimar could be interpreted as being autobiographical. A press release announcing the discovery describes how the artist “reimagines himself as an older, wiser man depicted against the serene palette-knife-sculptured sky and smooth expanse of the water, evoking Van Gogh’s lifelong personal interest with life at sea.” It said the composition evokes The Poor Fisherman (1881) by Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, which Van Gogh allegedly admired.

    “Through Elimar, Van Gogh creates a form of spiritual self-portrait, allowing viewers to see the painter as he wished to be remembered,” Anderson said.

    Authentication Debates

    Previously the director of the Whitney Museum of American Art between 1998 and 2003, Anderson founded LMI Group with former lawyer and LMI Group president Lawrence M. Shindell and the company’s CFO, ex-Wall Street investor Steven P. Novak. The company is inviting Van Gogh scholars and dealers to book a private appointment to view the work in person.

    “LMI Group’s data-based approach to verifying authorship of this painting represents a new standard of confidence for bringing to light unknown or forgotten works by important artists,” said Shindell. “By integrating science and technology with traditional tools of connoisseurship, historical context, formal analysis, and provenance research, we aim both to expand and tailor the resources available for art authentication based on the unique properties of the works under our care.”

    The firm did not provide information on how Elimar ended up at a garage sale in Minnesota, but alleges in the report that Van Gogh lost many works by giving them away to friends or being neglectful in his lifetime. It did not provide any provenance prior to 2016, which would indicate that the alleged Van Gogh painting was completely unknown to scholars until now since catalogues raisonnés usually list an artist’s lost works, whether destroyed or missing.

    a painting of a woman robed in blue holding a younger man with a naked torso from behind

    Vincent van Gogh, Pietà (1889). Image: Collection of Vatican Museums, Rome, via LMI Group International, Inc.

    The Van Gogh Museum has rejected independently authenticated works before. In 2016, the Van Gogh expert Bogomila Welsh-Ovcharov authenticated drawings that she said were from one of the artist’s 1888 sketchbooks, publishing the works in her book Vincent van Gogh: The Lost Arles Sketchbook. Their authenticity was later denounced by the Van Gogh Museum.

    Like many artists’ foundations, the museum has previously been threatened with legal action over past disputes and now no longer accepts authentication requests from individual members of the public. Hopefuls must already have the backing of serious specialists before their claim will be considered, reducing the number of annual submissions from several hundred to around 40.

    If the painting is real, it is sure to drum up excitement among collectors and everyday art fans alike. A recent exhibition of works from the end of Van Gogh’s life at the National Gallery in London recently broke the museum’s previous attendance records by attracting 334,589 visitors.

    The use of new, data-driven methods to authenticate art has been adopted by several start-up tech companies in recent years. Late last year, the Swiss company Art Recognition used A.I. tools to authenticate three artworks offered for sale by Germann Auction House in Zurich. Most notably, it was the only certification listed for an untitled, undated watercolor attributed to the German Expressionist artist Marianne von Werefkin, which sold for CHF 15,000 ($17,000) over a high estimate of $9,300 on November 25.

    This story was updated on Friday, January 31, at 6:24 a.m. ET.



    In a recent news story that has shocked the art world, a painting purchased at a garage sale for $50 has been revealed to be a fake Van Gogh. The painting was initially believed to be a lost masterpiece by the famous Dutch artist, but after further examination, experts at the Van Gogh Museum have confirmed that it is not an authentic work.

    This discovery serves as a reminder that not all art is created equal, and that just because a painting looks old or has a famous artist’s name attached to it, doesn’t mean it’s worth millions of dollars. The art market can be a tricky and sometimes deceptive place, and it’s important to do your research and consult experts before making any significant purchases.

    So next time you’re at a garage sale or flea market and come across a painting that seems too good to be true, remember the cautionary tale of the $50 Van Gogh. It’s always better to be safe than sorry when it comes to buying art, and to remember that true masterpieces are rare and valuable treasures that should be treated with respect and care.

    Tags:

    1. Van Gogh Museum
    2. $50 Garage Sale Painting
    3. $15 Million Masterpiece
    4. Art Authentication
    5. Vincent van Gogh
    6. Art Appraisal
    7. Art History
    8. Fine Art Investment
    9. Art Collecting
    10. Art Market Trends

    #Van #Gogh #Museum #Rules #Garage #Sale #Painting #Million #Masterpiece

  • Painting found at garage sale is a Van Gogh, experts say


    A painting bought at a garage sale in Minnesota is a previously unknown portrait by Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh, according to a newly published expert analysis.

    It was made by Van Gogh during his stay at a psychiatric hospital in the south of France in 1889, experts commissioned by art research firm LMI Group International have said after analyzing the canvas weave, paint pigment and other characteristics.

    Acquired by an antiques collector in 2016, the painting bears an inscription of the word “Elimar” in the bottom right corner.

    Measuring 45.7 centimeters by 41.9 centimeters (18 inches by 16.5 inches), experts identified the painting as a Van Gogh following a process that took four years.

    The oil on canvas painting is a portrait of a fisherman with a white beard, smoking a pipe as he repairs his net.

    It is based on a painting by Danish artist Michael Ancher (1849-1927), according to LMI, and is one of many of Van Gogh’s “translations” of works by other artists.

    Researchers also found a hair embedded in the canvas and sent it to be analyzed. Although it was found to be from a human male, efforts to match its DNA with descendants of Van Gogh were thwarted by its “degraded state,” said LMI.

    “By integrating science and technology with traditional tools of connoisseurship, historical context, formal analysis, and provenance research, we aim both to expand and tailor the resources available for art authentication based on the unique properties of the works under our care,” said Lawrence M. Shindell, chairman, president and chief executive officer of LMI Group, in a press release this week.

    Despite the exhaustive analysis, the painting still needs to be attributed to Van Gogh by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

    The museum previously refused to attribute the painting to Van Gogh when approached by the previous owner in December 2018.

    However, LMI, which acquired the painting in 2019, is confident that it is genuine.

    “The discovery of a previously unknown van Gogh painting should come as no surprise,” reads the report. “It is well-known that van Gogh lost many works, gave away works to friends and was not particularly careful about any work he considered a study, of which there were many.”

    LMI said in the release that the painting “is an emotionally rich, profoundly personal work created during the final and tumultuous chapter of van Gogh’s life.”

    The Dutch master produced some 900 paintings during his lifetime. He is thought to have suffered from a combination of bipolar and borderline personality disorder, though these illnesses were never diagnosed.

    In 2020, researchers from The University Medical Center Groningen, in the Netherlands, said that they believed Van Gogh experienced two brief psychotic episodes, presumed to be delirium caused by alcohol withdrawal, following his admission to hospital after cutting off his own ear with a razor in 1888.

    Van Gogh died by suicide in 1890 at the age of 37.

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    I recently stumbled upon a hidden gem at a local garage sale – a painting that experts are now saying is an authentic work by the legendary artist Vincent Van Gogh.

    The piece, which had been tucked away in a dusty corner with a price tag of just $20, caught my eye with its vibrant colors and intricate brushstrokes. Intrigued, I decided to have it evaluated by art experts, who were shocked to discover that it may be a previously undocumented Van Gogh masterpiece.

    The painting, believed to have been created during Van Gogh’s time in Arles, France, showcases his signature style and emotional depth. Experts are currently conducting further analysis to confirm its authenticity, but the initial findings are incredibly exciting.

    If proven to be genuine, this discovery could be one of the most significant in the art world in recent years. Stay tuned for updates as the investigation unfolds, and in the meantime, I’ll be cherishing my incredible find from that humble garage sale.

    Tags:

    • Garage sale find
    • Van Gogh painting
    • Art discovery
    • Masterpiece at garage sale
    • Expert authentication
    • Rare art find
    • Famous artist painting
    • Treasure hunt success
    • Valuable artwork
    • Art collector’s dream

    #Painting #garage #sale #Van #Gogh #experts

  • The Letters of Vincent van Gogh (Penguin Classics) – Paperback – GOOD

    The Letters of Vincent van Gogh (Penguin Classics) – Paperback – GOOD



    The Letters of Vincent van Gogh (Penguin Classics) – Paperback – GOOD

    Price : 9.08

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    Vincent van Gogh is one of the most iconic artists in history, known for his unique style and emotional depth. Now, readers can delve into the mind of this brilliant painter with “The Letters of Vincent van Gogh,” a collection of his personal correspondence.

    This Penguin Classics edition features a collection of over 800 letters written by van Gogh to his brother Theo, as well as other artists and friends. These letters provide a fascinating insight into van Gogh’s thoughts, struggles, and artistic process.

    The paperback format makes this collection accessible to a wide audience, allowing readers to immerse themselves in van Gogh’s world and gain a deeper understanding of his life and work. Whether you’re a fan of art history or simply curious about the man behind the masterpieces, “The Letters of Vincent van Gogh” is a must-read.

    With beautiful reproductions of van Gogh’s paintings and insightful annotations, this edition is a valuable addition to any bookshelf. Pick up a copy today and discover the heart and mind of one of the greatest artists of all time.
    #Letters #Vincent #van #Gogh #Penguin #Classics #Paperback #GOOD, visualization

  • VAN GOGH ART Extra Large Wall Clock for Living Room Kitchen Mantel Decor, Completely Silent Non Ticking Battery-Operated Metal Round Rustic Modern Black Wall Clock – 30 Inch Arabic Number

    VAN GOGH ART Extra Large Wall Clock for Living Room Kitchen Mantel Decor, Completely Silent Non Ticking Battery-Operated Metal Round Rustic Modern Black Wall Clock – 30 Inch Arabic Number


    Price: $89.99
    (as of Dec 21,2024 22:51:05 UTC – Details)


    Product Description

    modern large wall clockmodern large wall clock

    suitable for various spatialsuitable for various spatial

    wall clock for front door, living roomwall clock for front door, living room

    metal frame detailsmetal frame details

    clear texture with multiple colorsclear texture with multiple colors

    fixed hole easy to hung with metal pointer durable long lastingfixed hole easy to hung with metal pointer durable long lasting

    multiple sizemultiple size

    1.Modern Black Clock: This large 30 inch retro-style clock features a hollowed-out design crafted from high-quality metal, ensuring durability and a vintage look.
    2.Whisper Quiet Operation: Powered by a AA battery (not included), this clock boasts a silent quartz movement with minimal ticking, perfect for undisturbed environments.
    3.Versatile Wall Decor Accent: Ideal for enhancing any space—be it living rooms, offices, bedrooms, kitchens, mantelpiece, classrooms, or public areas—this clock serves as chic wall decor.
    4.Easy Hanging: Designed with an easy-to-install back slot that minimizes wall damage while providing sturdy support. Simply hang and enjoy.
    5.Indoor Use Only: This decorative wall clock is designed exclusively for indoor environments, adding a touch of elegance to any place it graces.

    Customers say

    Customers appreciate the clock’s appearance, value, and weight. They find it a nice and stylish piece, with decent quality for the price.

    AI-generated from the text of customer reviews


    Looking for a statement piece to add to your home decor? Look no further than this stunning VAN GOGH ART Extra Large Wall Clock! This 30-inch clock is perfect for adding a touch of rustic modern style to your living room, kitchen, or mantel.

    Made of high-quality metal, this clock features a black finish that will complement any color scheme. The Arabic numbers are easy to read, making it both stylish and functional. Plus, it operates completely silently, so you won’t have to worry about any annoying ticking sounds.

    This battery-operated wall clock is easy to hang and will instantly elevate the look of any room. Whether you’re looking to add a focal point to your space or simply keep track of time in style, this VAN GOGH ART clock is the perfect choice. Don’t wait, add this beautiful piece to your home today!
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