Breaking van Gogh
Saint-Rémy, Forgery, and the $95 Million Fake at the Met
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Narrated by:
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Jeff Cummings
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Written by:
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James Ottar Grundvig
About this listen
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.
©2016 James O. Grundvig (P)2017 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.What listeners say about Breaking van Gogh
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Roberta W
- 2024-03-31
Outstanding
Thoroughly enjoyed this one! Very detailed investigation into the provenance of one Van Gogh artwork … that turned out to be two of… or is that three? Or is that two plus one fake? I’m amazed at how much I understood about the details of the work from an audiobook. Great descriptions! The positive surprise was a mini biography of Vincent tucked into the middle of this book, with fresh speculations onto what impacted his health, without depicting him as crazy. Very respectful and honouring. Only downside was the author’s distain for The Met after they stonewalled his attempts to see the provenance records of the work; unfortunately he let this get the better of him and the book ended on a bit of a sour and snippy note. Still a fantastic listen!
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