News

In his first general audience in Rome, Pope Leo XIV referred to Vincent van Gogh’s painting “Sower at Sunset” and called it a ...
where many contemporary viewers have seen the painting’s blue-hued flowers—but they’re seeing a distorted version. As a new ...
Van Gogh created the violet by mixing together blue and red paints ... Getty researchers have created a digital reconstruction of the painting to show how Irises might have originally looked ...
The painting has "the same three-quarter view of all four van Gogh self-portraits painted in ... ‘whites of the eyes’ often in blue or green, a pronounced nasal-labial line, cursory shorthand ...
Digital color reconstruction of the original painting (right) What the research team discovered, Ormond and Patterson said, was that van Gogh achieved a violet color by mixing blue with a red ...
The Groninger Museum is breathing a sigh of relief after recovering an 1884 Vincent Van Gogh painting that was stolen more than three years ago Alamy Stock Photo Not only is an IKEA blue bag ...
deeming it a "great day for all Van Gogh lovers worldwide." The painting -- estimated to be worth between about $3.2 million to $6.4 million -- was handed to Brand by an unnamed man in a blue Ikea ...
In the two paintings the walls were lilac, but the pigments have again now faded to blue (both the bedroom and ward walls were almost certainly actually whitewashed, so Van Gogh’s colour is ...
Inside the blue bag was something Brand and Dutch police had spent more than three years searching for: a Van Gogh painting stolen from a museum.
The painting was delivered to Brand’s Amsterdam home in a blue plastic Ikea bag. Dutch art detective Arthur Brand with Van Gogh’s The Parsonage garden at Nuenen in Spring, a few minutes after ...
“In the summer of 1887 Van Gogh was experimenting with painting portraits ... also revealed fuzzy images beneath his famous “The Blue Room.” While it may be possible to uncover the hidden ...
where many contemporary viewers have seen the painting’s blue-hued flowers—but they’re seeing a distorted version. As a new exhibition illuminates, van Gogh’s irises were originally purple.