Springfield News-Sun

How Detroit pulled in Van Gogh works from afar

- By Maureen Feighan

DETROIT — How do you bring together 74 Vincent van Gogh works worth millions of dollars from museums, foundation­s and private collection­s all over the world for one massive exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts? Carefully. Very carefully.

As the highly anticipate­d “Van Gogh in America” exhibit opened to the public on Sunday, Oct. 2,, all 74 works were in place for visitors to admire in all their beauty.

But to get them there, each museum or collection sent its own “courier” to personally escort the work to the Detroit Institute of Arts. Works were sent from roughly 60 locations all over the globe, including Paris’ famed Musée d’orsay, Madrid’s Museo Nacional Thyssen-bornemisza and Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum. The paintings and drawings also will leave with a courier.

The couriers “watch it (the painting) being installed and then they’ll come back to watch us de-install it,” said Jill Shaw, the Rebecca A. Boylan and Thomas W. Sidlik Curator of European Art, 1850-1970 at Detroit Institute of Arts, who is the exhibit’s curator. “They travel with them.”

“Van Gogh in America,” which explores how Van Gogh’s work was received in the United States and how the DIA became the first U.S. museum to purchase one of his paintings, “Self-portrait” (1887), for its permanent collection in 1922. Other Midwestern museums followed suit, but it took roughly 20 more years before a New York museum purchased a Van Gogh work.

Several of the works featured in the exhibit also come from museums closer to home, such as “The Bedroom,”

HOW TO GO

What: “Van Gogh in America,” an art exhibit featuring 74 authentic Van Gogh works, including paintings and drawings, from all over the world

Where: The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit

When: Running through Jan. 22

Tickets: $14-$29 for adults

More info: Go online to dia.org/events/ exhibition­s/van-goghameric­a.

lent from the Art Institute of Chicago. Some are from private collectors, such as “Harvest in Provence,” which Van Gogh painted in 1888, inspired by the landscape and colors of Arles, France. It’s on loan to the DIA from Heather James Fine Art in Palm Desert.

The largest number of works for the exhibit, approximat­ely 20, came from Vincent van Gogh Foundation, which was establishe­d by Van Gogh’s nephew, Vincent Willem van Gogh. After his mother, Jo, died, Van Gogh establishe­d a foundation with his uncle’s work and also the Van Gogh Museum in the 1960s.

“The museum exhibits the works that are owned by the foundation,” said Shaw.

Seeing so many Van Gogh paintings in one spot, even the couriers were impressed, said Shaw. The exhibit, considered one of the largest exhibition­s of Van Gogh’s work in the 21st century, was originally supposed to open in 2020 but was pushed back before COVID-19, allowing the DIA to add six more works that weren’t originally included.

Van Gogh’s story “is an incredible story,” said Shaw.

 ?? DETROIT NEWS/TNS ROBIN BUCKSON/THE ?? Mary Kethman (center) and Finn Rosbury, both of Detroit, look at paintings at the Van Gogh exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts in Detroit on Oct. 2.
DETROIT NEWS/TNS ROBIN BUCKSON/THE Mary Kethman (center) and Finn Rosbury, both of Detroit, look at paintings at the Van Gogh exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts in Detroit on Oct. 2.

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