Have an extra $50 million burning a hole in your pocket? That's how much you'll need to get one of the Venus' arms of paintings, a Van Gogh looking for a buyer. Prestigious auction house Sotheby's is estimates that Still Life, Vase with Daisies and Poppies (1890) (also called Still Life: Red Poppies and Daisies) will go under the hammer anywhere from $30 million to $50 million (US).
The painting officially goes on sale November 4 at Sotheby's Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale. It is, unpredictably, predicted to be the sale highlight. Museums, private owners of Van Gogh's works and the companies that insure them will be more than eager to see what the final price is as this will help them re-evaluate how much their Van Gogh's are now worth.
What's so special about this painting? It's red flowers in a vase, right? The background is similar to those of the infamous Sunflowers series. This also may be one of the last paintings that Van Gogh did, according to the New York Observer. It was painted at Auvers-sur-Oise, France, possibly in June of 1890.
Let's hope that Still Life, Vase with Daisies and Poppies does not share the same fate as Portrait of Dr. Gachet which disappeared after being bought at a Christie's auction for a Japanese collector 1990. That painting's price was over $82 million. Very few Van Gogh paintings have ever been on the open market in America since the 1980's, notes The Financial Times.
Image is from the Van Gogh Gallery's excellent website.
EDIT November 5: The painting went for $61.8 million.
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Friday, October 17, 2014
Friday, October 10, 2014
Vincent Van Gogh The Musical -- Just Say No
The passion of the artist committed to finding the sacred in the common ... the suffering of an ignored genius ... the ultimate tragedy of an artist dying on the verge of international acclaim ... all of this is just a fraction of the complex portrait of the man, the myth, the legend -- Vincent Van Gogh.
And soon it will coming to you -- as a musical.
WHAT? No, sorry -- you read that right. According to the Telegraph, Vincent will premier in Amsterdam sometime in the autumn of 2015. Why 2015? Because that is the 125th anniversary of Van Gogh's death. It will be produced by a Dutchman, Albert Verlinde. The aim of the musical is to "bring Vincent van Gogh's works to life in a non-traditional way". Content is expected to focus on the decent into madness and the Ear Thing.
Non-traditional is right. Amsterdam -- you have been warned.
The Don McClean pop song was bad enough (hey -- at least that was catchy if way too fanboyish). Do we really have to suffer through a two-hour musical? Or even just the knowledge that a musical on Van Gogh exists? Only if it's a comedy, please.
The rather bemused and confused Van Gogh Museum of Amsterdam plans on holding a special exhibit that somehow has a tenuous connection with the musical. The director of the museum has been quoted in the press as saying, "It's perhaps a little odd to celebrate his death."
Just when you think pop culture can't get any worse -- it does.
And soon it will coming to you -- as a musical.
WHAT? No, sorry -- you read that right. According to the Telegraph, Vincent will premier in Amsterdam sometime in the autumn of 2015. Why 2015? Because that is the 125th anniversary of Van Gogh's death. It will be produced by a Dutchman, Albert Verlinde. The aim of the musical is to "bring Vincent van Gogh's works to life in a non-traditional way". Content is expected to focus on the decent into madness and the Ear Thing.
Non-traditional is right. Amsterdam -- you have been warned.
The Don McClean pop song was bad enough (hey -- at least that was catchy if way too fanboyish). Do we really have to suffer through a two-hour musical? Or even just the knowledge that a musical on Van Gogh exists? Only if it's a comedy, please.
The rather bemused and confused Van Gogh Museum of Amsterdam plans on holding a special exhibit that somehow has a tenuous connection with the musical. The director of the museum has been quoted in the press as saying, "It's perhaps a little odd to celebrate his death."
Just when you think pop culture can't get any worse -- it does.