How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (2024)

The Red Vineyard is among Van Gogh’s most dramatically coloured Provençal landscapes, but it is also famed for being the only painting that the artist is certain to have sold. It went for 400 francs (then £16) at a Brussels exhibition in March 1890, four months before his suicide.

The picture is now in Russia, at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. Recently the museum decided to conserve the picture, to ensure its long-term preservation. This led to the first investigation of The Red Vineyard using modern scientific techniques, unearthing fascinating discoveries.

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (1)

Van Gogh came across the vineyard on a late afternoon walk with Paul Gauguin on 28 October 1888, five days after his friend’s arrival in Arles. Picking the grapes normally takes place in September in Provence, but the harvest seems to have been late that year. On around 11 October Vincent had written to his brother Theo: "There are bunches weighing a kilo, even—the grape is magnificent this year, from the fine autumn days."

Vincent described the vineyard scene he had witnessed with Gauguin: “A red vineyard, completely red like red wine. In the distance it became yellow, and then a green sky with a sun, fields violet and sparkling yellow here and there after the rain in which the setting sun was reflected.”

Although Van Gogh liked to paint landscapes outdoors, he completed The Red Vineyard back in his studio—using his imagination. Gauguin was then encouraging him to make his pictures more creative, less literal. No doubt the two artists discussed this vineyard scene on their return after the walk—over a glass or two of the local Provençal red wine.

Van Gogh’s fiery colouration is certainly extreme. The vines are much redder than one would expect, with Vincent describing it as the colour of the plant Virginia Creeper. On the right of the composition is what might appear as a river, but it is a road, glistening wet after recent rain. The huge sun, setting in a late autumnal afternoon, produces an eerily yellow sky.

In the upper left, the row of trees shelters a road running north-east from Arles. On the horizon, to the far right, one can just make out the distant ruins of the abbey of Montmajour, painted in light blue.

The Pushkin Museum’s examination of The Red Vineyard, sponsored by LG Signature, has revealed important details about how the picture was developed. Parts of the sun and sky are created from paint squeezed directly from the tube onto the canvas, with the artist sometimes using his finger to smooth it out.

A technical analysis shows that the colouration of the sky has been partly lost. Van Gogh used chrome yellow paint, which darkens with exposure to light. His original yellows would have been even brighter and still more dramatic.

Van Gogh also made changes to the composition. The man standing in the road in the upper right was originally a woman dressed in a skirt, white blouse and hat.

The prominent woman in dark blue bending over a basket, in the central foreground, was added later. The woman on the far right, by the edge of the road, wears the traditional costume of the Arlésiennes, the famed women of Arles. The Pushkin specialists suggest that she represents Van Gogh’s friend Marie Ginoux, who with her husband ran the Café de la Gare, just a few doors from the Yellow House, the artist’s home and studio.

The Red Vineyard has an unusual history. In April 1889 Vincent sent the painting to Theo in Paris. Describing it as “very beautiful”, Theo hung it in the Parisian apartment he had just moved into with his bride Jo Bonger.

A few months afterwards Vincent was offered the opportunity to exhibit a few paintings at an exhibition organised by the group Les Vingt in Brussels in January 1890. Among those he chose was The Red Vineyard, which he asked Theo to dispatch. At the show it was bought by Anna Boch, who kept it until 1907.

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (2)

Two years later The Red Vineyard was acquired by the avant-garde Moscow collector and textile factory owner Ivan Morosov. The asking price had risen to 30,000 francs, an indication of Van Gogh’s rapid rise to fame.

Morosov’s collection was nationalised in 1918, a year after the Russian Revolution. In 1919 he emigrated to Finland, dying in 1921. Initially Morosov’s paintings were kept in his Moscow mansion, which was turned into a public museum.

In 1948, The Red Vineyard was among the works transferred to the Pushkin Museum. However during Stalin’s later years it was not on display, since he regarded Modern French art as inappropriate for a Communist society. Following de-Stalinization, after the leader’s death in 1953, the Van Gogh once more went on show. The Red Vineyard has remained in Moscow and has not been sent out on loan for over 60 years.

The question of the painting’s condition recently came up with the organisation of a major exhibition of the Morosov collection in Paris. Eventually it was decided that the Van Gogh was too fragile to travel. The Pushkin director Marina Loshak admitted that it was “very sad” that this “ill” painting could not travel to outside exhibitions. Hence the decision to conserve it.

The exhibition The Morozov Collection: Icons of Modern Art is now on at the Fondation Louis Vuitton until 3 April (with nearly 200 works of Modern art, but without The Red Vineyard). The show has proved a spectacular success, having already attracted over 800,000 visitors. The final figure could reach 1.2 million by the closure, an astonishing number, particularly during the pandemic.

One question that the Pushkin will now have to consider is the presentation of The Red Vineyard, which has been hung in an ornate gold frame. This frame probably dates from the time of Morosov’s acquisition, in 1909. It has become part of the history of the painting, so it is unlikely to be changed.

But a fancy gilt frame was not at all what Vincent had intended. In a letter to Theo he gave his own views on framing: “simple strips of wood nailed on the stretching frame and painted.” He drew an accompanying rough thumbnail sketch of the framed painting.

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (3)

The Red Vineyard is still in the Pushkin’s conservation studio, but it is due to go on display this summer in the museum’s presentation of the Paris exhibition, Brother Ivan: the Collection of Ivan and Mikhail Morozov (27 June-30 October).

Van Gogh’s companion Gauguin also painted his own depiction of the vineyard which they had seen together during their walk near Montmajour. But his version of the scene could hardly have been more different. Indeed, at first glance, it looks little like an autumnal harvest.

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (4)

Gauguin’s painting, which he initially entitled Human Misery (November 1888), focuses on a melancholic woman whose figure was inspired by a contorted Peruvian mummy that the artist had seen in a Paris museum. Behind her are two rows of dense vines, with a couple of stooping pickers, set against a strong yellow-ochre background.

Van Gogh commented on Gauguin’s technique, saying that the composition with the grieving woman had come from his friend’s “head”, from his imagination. “If he doesn’t spoil it or leave it unfinished it will be very beautiful and strange,” Vincent commented.

Gauguin himself believed it was his “best picture” of the year—although its sombre title can hardly have boosted the chances of a sale. But like Van Gogh’s painting it, too, soon found a buyer—Emile Schuffenecker, a progressive artist friend. It was in the artistic circle of the avant-garde that the work of both Van Gogh and Gauguin was first appreciated—and found buyers.

Other Van Gogh news:

Yesterday, the Courtauld opened its exhibition Van Gogh Self-Portraits (until 8 May). The critics have greeted it with admiration, attracting five-star reviews from UK publications including the Times, Guardian, Daily Telegraph and Evening Standard.

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (5)
How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? (2024)

FAQs

How did the only painting sold by Van Gogh in his lifetime end up in Russia? ›

Apparently, Anna Boch owned two paintings of van Gogh's and her brother, Eugène, owned several. Anna Boch sold The Red Vineyard in 1906, though, for 10,000 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 1948.

What was the only painting sold by Vincent van Gogh during his lifetime? ›

The Red Vineyard (November 1888) is now famed as the only painting that Van Gogh is certain to have sold in his lifetime. It was shown in an exhibition in Brussels in March 1890, four months before the artist's demise. Going for 400 francs (then £16), it was bought by Anna Boch, a Belgian avant-garde painter.

Who sold Van Gogh paintings after his death? ›

But just six months later, Theo also passed away. His widow, Jo van Gogh-Bonger, set about completing the task. She sold some of Vincent's works, loaned others out for exhibitions and – also very importantly – published his letters to Theo.

Where did Van Gogh keep all his paintings? ›

Vincent van Gogh sent his paintings to his brother Theo who stored them in his house. From 1889 many of them were also kept at Père Tanguy's place in Paris.

Where did Van Gogh end his life? ›

The death of Vincent van Gogh occurred in the early morning of 29 July, 1890 in his room at the Auberge Ravoux in the French village of Auvers-sur-Oise after presumably shooting himself two days earlier.

What is the most expensive painting ever sold? ›

Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci

Salvator Mundi, translated to “Savior of the World,” is not only the world's most expensive painting—it's possibly the most controversial painting, as well.

Where is Van Gogh buried? ›

Van Gogh died in Auvers-sur-Oise on 29 July 1890. He is buried in the municipal cemetery next to his brother Theo. Both graves and the village, an outdoor museum with reproductions of his paintings (free map available from the Tourist Office) have become a pilgrimage for art lovers.

Who inherited Vincent van Gogh's money? ›

Central to it are Jo Bonger, widow of Vincent's long-suffering art-dealer brother, Theo, who provided him essential financial support during his 10-year career, and her son, Willem, the family heir, who was only a few months old when his uncle died and not even a year old when his father died.

Who owns most of Van Gogh's paintings? ›

In 1962, through the Kingdom of the Netherlands, he transferred control of the entire collection (the paintings, drawings and letters) to the Vincent van Gogh Foundation. In return, the State arranged for the Van Gogh Museum to be built, helping to ensure that the collection remains accessible to everyone, forever.

What was the last painting before Van Gogh killed himself? ›

"I look at my screen and it clicked," Van der Veen said. Van Gogh's last painting, Tree Roots, was painted in the final hours of his life and now sits in the collection of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

Did Van Gogh have a wife? ›

Vincent had difficulty being alone. He often longed for a wife and a family, but he remained single.

Are there any missing Van Gogh? ›

There are 85 works in total today missing or in unknown locations. It is possible some of them still exist, but their whereabouts are not known, and they have not been seen in public for over fifty years. Six paintings have been confirmed destroyed in fires, five of those were related to the Second World War.

Did Van Gogh have children? ›

This one's easy: no, Vincent didn't have any children.

Who was Vincent van Gogh's only friend? ›

In May 1890 Vincent left the asylum in the South of France and went to Auvers-sur-Oise, close to Paris and Theo. There he found 'a true friend' in Doctor Gachet. But at the end of July Vincent shot himself in the chest. He died two days later with Theo, his brother and best friend, at his side.

What was Van Gogh's last message? ›

As he lay on his death bed, having apparently shot himself, Vincent Van Gogh is said to have uttered the final words, "The sadness will last forever".

Did Van Gogh have a funeral? ›

Funeral. The funeral cortège made its way from Auberge Ravoux to the churchyard at three o'clock on Wednesday 30 July, led by a grief-stricken Theo. He was followed by friends from Paris, the Ravoux family, neighbours and other villagers who had known Vincent in Auvers.

What is the most a Van Gogh painting has sold for? ›

His most expensive painting, Orchard with Cypresses, sold for a record-breaking $117 million in 2022, but this isn't the only example of how lucrative his art is as other artworks are also worth millions of dollars. About 10% of art investments increased in value over the last 50 years.

What is one famous painting from Vincent van Gogh? ›

Perhaps Van Gogh's most famous masterpiece, The Starry Night, is on view at the MoMA, in New York City. But, despite its fame, many may not know that van Gogh produced it while staying at a mental asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France.

Why did Vincent cut his ear off and who did he give it to? ›

The circ*mstances in which Van Gogh cut off his ear are not exactly known, but many experts believe that it was following a furious row with Gauguin at the Yellow House. Afterwards, Van Gogh allegedly packaged up the ear and gave it to a prostitute in a nearby brothel. He was then admitted to a hospital in Arles.

What was Vincent van Gogh's first painting? ›

His arrival there marked the beginning of a highly productive period that was to culminate in his first major painting, The Potato Eaters of 1885 (Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam).

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