Wednesday, 10 March 2021

Although Not 'Unknown',

this painting by Vincent van Gogh,


has never been seen in public, titled “Street scene in Montmartre (Impasse des Deux Frères and the Pepper Mill)” (1887), oil on canvas,  46.1 x 61.3 centimetres, image courtesy of Sotheby’s, 

after spending more than a century in a private collection, the piece is being put up for auction, before the auction only a small, black-and-white photograph taken in 1972 existed of the painting that’s reminiscent of some of the artist’s other works, 

it was painted it in the spring of 1887. “Street scene in Montmartre (Impasse des Deux Frères and the Pepper Mill)” depicts a couple walking on a windy day in front of an entertainment hub in Paris,

the lively street is thought to be the same as that in “Impasse des Deux Frères,” which currently hangs at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, and similarly depicts a mill and flags promoting the cabaret and bar through the gates. According to The Art Newspaper, there’s speculation about how the family obtained “Street scene in Montmartre,” considering many of van Gogh’s artworks at the time were gifted to his brother, Theo, pending COVID-19 precautions, the work is slated for short exhibitions in Amsterdam, Hong Kong, and Paris throughout March, and in case you have a space on the wall that needs to be filled, make sure you have £4 million or more, (some estimates say £9 million), I was tempted, but the only wall that it would look nice on has a beautiful photograph of our wedding on it, so I will pass on the Van Gogh.


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