Breaking van Gogh, James Ottar Grundvig
Breaking van Gogh, James Ottar Grundvig
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Breaking van Gogh
Saint-Rémy, Forgery, and the $95 Million Fake at the Met

Author: James Ottar Grundvig

Narrator: Jeff Cummings

Unabridged: 7 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)

Published: 07/25/2017

Categories: Nonfiction, Art


Synopsis

In Breaking van Gogh, James Grundvig investigates the history and authenticity of van Gogh’s iconic Wheat Field with Cypresses, currently on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Relying on a vast array of techniques from the study of the painter’s biography and personal correspondence to the examination of the painting’s style and technical characteristics, Grundvig proves that ?the “most expensive purchase” housed in the Met is a fake.

The Wheat Field with Cypresses is traditionally considered to date to the time of van Gogh’s stay in the Saint-Rémy mental asylum, where the artist produced many of his masterpieces. After his suicide, these paintings languished for a decade, until his sister-in-law took them to a family friend for restoration. The restorer had other ideas.

In the course of his investigation, Grundvig traces the incredible story of this piece from the artist’s brushstrokes in sunlit southern France to a forger’s den in Paris, the art collections of a prominent Jewish banking family and a Nazi-sympathizing Swiss arms dealer, and finally the walls of the Met. The riveting narrative weaves its way through the turbulent history of twentieth-century Europe, as the painting’s fate is intimately bound with some of its major players.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Melinda on March 23, 2021

This was a fascinating read. The book was essentially a sleuthing exercise by the author to show that the provenance for van Gogh's painting 'Wheatfield with Cypress Trees" (the painting now resides at the Met Museum in New York) cannot be proven and the painting that is at the Met is most likely a......more

Goodreads review by Sherry on April 24, 2024

I really found a lot of material in this book fascinating and informative, but I also thought it was somewhat confusing and the material disorganized. Perhaps this was in part due to my reading it on a tablet instead of a paper copy. It doesn't tell the multiple part story of Van Gogh, the Swiss arm......more