The Asian Age

‘Doubted Van Gogh self-potrait is real’

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Amsterdam: Researcher­s said Monday that a brooding self-portrait by Vincent van Gogh is genuine after decades of uncertaint­y, identifyin­g it as the only work painted by the Dutch master while suffering from psychosis. The “Self Portrait (1889)” — which shows the artist giving a sideways glance against a swirling blue and yellow background —was confirmed as authentic by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Questions were first raised about whether the painting — owned by the National Gallery in Oslo, Norway — was genuine as far back as 1970 but the Norwegian museum finally decided to end the doubts in 2014, sending it to Dutch experts. Using X-ray analysis of the canvas, studies of the brushwork and references to letters to his brother Theo, experts establishe­d it was painted while Van Gogh was in an asylum in SaintRemy in France in the late summer of 1889.

“The self-portrait that is behind me has been doubted for a very long time,” Louis van Tilborgh, senior researcher at the Van Gogh Museum, told AFP as he showed off the picture. “It’s a work of art that for all kinds of reasons was by him but neverthele­ss also had certain aspects that were different from other pictures. “So we had to find an explanatio­n for that and that was difficult, but I think we’ve solved that and so we’re proud that we’ve more or less given the work back.”

The Oslo museum bought the painting in 1910 from a collector in Paris for 10,000 francs, making it the first Van Gogh self-portrait to enter a public collection, but doubts have swirled about it for some 50 years.

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