When was the red vineyard sold
How much is the Mona Lisa worth? How much are Van Gogh's paintings worth? How much did the starry night sell for?
What was the only painting that Van Gogh sold? The Red Vineyards near Arles. Who is the world's most valued painter who sold only one painting in his entire life? Did Van Gogh really only sell one painting?
He sold only one painting while he was alive: The Red Vineyard which went for francs in Belgium seven months before his death. How many paintings did Van Gogh sell before death? Van Gogh only sold one painting during his lifetime Red Vineyard at Arles. This painting now resides at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. The rest of Van Gogh's more than paintings were not sold or made famous until after his death.
Of course, bearing in mind that van Gogh didn't start painting until he was twenty-seven years old, and died when he was thirty-seven, it would not be unremarkable that he did not sell many. Furthermore, the paintings that were to become famous were the ones produced after he went to Arles, France in , only two years before he died. What is remarkable is that just a few decades after his death, his art would become well-known worldwide and that he would eventually become one of the most famous artists ever.
In , van Gogh was invited to participate in a group show in Brussels called the XX or the Vingtistes. Van Gogh suggested to his brother, Theo, an art dealer and van Gogh's agent, that he send six paintings to be exhibited with the group, one of which was The Red Vineyard.
They became friends and van Gogh painted his portrait, which he called The Poet. Anna Boch sold The Red Vineyard in , though, for 10, francs, and it was sold again that same year to a Russian textile businessman, Sergei Shchukin. It was given to the Pushkin Museum by the State of Russia in It is a dramatic landscape painting in saturated autumnal reds and yellows punctuated by the blue clothing of workers in a vineyard, with a bright yellow sky and sun reflected in the river adjacent to the vineyard.
The viewer's eye is drawn through the landscape by the strong diagonal line that leads to the high horizon and the setting sun in the distance. In one of his many letters to his brother, Theo, van Gogh tells him he is.
In a subsequent letter to Theo, Vincent says about this painting:. Tralbaut uncovered a letter from October 3, in which Theo wrote to London art dealers, Sulley and Lori, saying.
However, others have analyzed this transaction and discovered anomalies regarding the date of October 3, , speculating that Theo dated his letter incorrectly. The reasons they give for their theory are that Theo never again referred to the sale of one of Vincent's paintings in London in subsequent correspondence. Sulley and Lori were not yet partners in ; there is no record of a Corot being sold to Sulley in October According to the Van Gogh Museum website, van Gogh actually sold or bartered a number of paintings during his lifetime.
His first commission came from his uncle Cor who was an art dealer. Wanting to help his nephew's career he ordered 19 cityscapes of The Hague. Particularly when van Gogh was younger, he would trade his paintings for food or art supplies, a practice not unfamiliar to many young artists starting out in their careers.
It doesn't seem like unwanted canvases were piling up on Van Gogh's studio floor, with absolutely nowhere to go. No, no answers. But I did want to draw your attention to the beginning of Julian Schnabel's film Basquiat, which has a VG theme running through it.
The clogs! Basquiat, perhaps, has the opposite problem to VG: too much success, too early. Everybody wants to get on the Van Gogh boat. There's no trip so horrible that someone won't take it. The idea of the unrecognized genius slaving away in a garret is a deliciously foolish one. We must credit the life of Vincent Van Gogh for really sending this myth into orbit.
How many pictures did he sell? He couldn't give them away. We are so ashamed of his life that the rest of art history will be retribution for Van Gogh's neglect. No one wants to be part of a generation that ignores another Van Gogh. I might have mentioned this to you before, but did you know there's an iPad app that has every one of VG's letters digitally scanned and searchable by keyword? I love that quote from "Basquiat," Ben. Thanks for sharing. It fits perfectly with my artist-genius discussion at the beginning of my post.
Just one more reason why I should get an iPad, I guess. Nice man. Extremely informative post. I'll be sure to pass this along to my tech guys. I dont think it's worth picking at any more than the Boch sale, which for all intents and purposes was as much a token of support for his struggle than a sale purely vased on the content of the piece.
The fact of the matter is that Vincent, even despite his brother's connections never penetrated the mainstream art market — which was interested in other things than what he was producing at the time. Getting finicky over what constituted a sale or not is one of those things only art historians would obsess about. His style wasn't 'saleable' at the time — simple as that.
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