The Asian Age

Van Gogh ‘ suicide gun’ goes on display in Amsterdam

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Am st e r d a m ’ s renowned Van Gogh Museum unveiled a new exhibition Tuesday focusing on Vincent’s final 18 months of mental anguish before he shot himself in 1890, including the suspected gun he used in his suicide.

Called On the Verge of Insanity, the exhibition seeks to answer questions such as why Van Gogh cut off his ear, and the precise nature of his mental illness that ultimately led to his death in Auvers- surOise near Paris at the age of 37.

One of the most interestin­g exhibition pieces is the small- calibre revolver believed to have been the weapon Van Gogh used to shoot himself in the chest.

“The small, badly corroded revolver from a private collection and being shown for the first time, might be the weapon with which Van Gogh sought to end his life,” the Van Gogh Museum said.

Vincent shot himself on July 27, 1890 and managed to stumble back to the inn where he was staying before succumbing to his wound 30 hours later. At the time the suicide weapon was not found.

Around 1960 an Auvers farmer working on his land discovered the rusty gun, a 7.0 mm Lefaucheux pocket revolver, in the fields where Van Gogh shot himself.

“The degree of corrosion suggested that the weapon lay in the ground for 50- 60 years,” the museum said some 30 hours later.”

Van Gogh’s left ear

Another fascinatin­g exhibition piece is a recently- discovered letter from doctor Felix Rey, the physician who treated Van Gogh in hospital after he cut off his left ear while living in the southern French town of Arles.

“Rey’s letter includes drawings showing that Van Gogh cut off the whole of his left ear and not, as was long believed, just part of it,” the museum said.

“The discovery brings to an end a long- standing biographic­al question,” it added.

The letter was recently found by amateur historian and author Bernadette Murphy in the archives of American writer Irving Stone, while researchin­g her book called Van Gogh’s Ear: the True Story.

Van Gogh’s portrait of Rey is also on display for the first time at the museum, as well as a raft of previously unexhibite­d documents about his illness.

The exhibition also offers a slew of diagnoses throughout the years for Van Gogh’s mental illness.

“An unambiguou­s and definitive answer to the question of his precise illness cannot be given,” the museum said. “Although we know a great deal about Van Gogh, it is obviously no longer possible to question or examine the patient himself.”

A team of medical specialist­s and Van Gogh experts will meet on September 14 to discuss the matter and their findings will be presented the next day at a public symposium.

On the Verge of Insanity, however shows that Van Gogh’s art “ought not to be viewed as a product of his illness, but arose in spite of his condition,” the museum said.

The exhibition runs from July 15 to September 25.

 ??  ?? The badly- rusted revolver that Vincent Van Gogh supposedly used to kill himself in 1890 —
The badly- rusted revolver that Vincent Van Gogh supposedly used to kill himself in 1890 —

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