Subject: What was Vincent van Gogh's first painting?
Well now, I believe this started painting as you can see and that is dated "62" damn sure wasn't done in 1962.
In turning this little started painting over above this painting, you can see with your own eyes what we have here, and that being a portrait of Vincent's sister Anna.
How can we know?
The earliest painting by van Gogh still in existence was painted in 1881. It is Still Life with Cabbage and Clogs.
Carpenters from the lumber yard who work at Vincent's fathers church knew Vincent from when he came around the lumber yard for some of the materials he would need in making different things. the son of the carpenter spoke of Vincent painting in color when he was a young boy.
Getting back to Vincent's supposed earliest painting,.... I have in my own collection an oil portrait of his sister Anna. It has a drawing on its verso of a barnyard scene with a horse and out buildings dated "62". It was started to be painted when it appears it was turned over by Vincent for this portrait of his sister Anna and painted in living color. Anna would have been 7 years old at the time while Vincent would have been 9 year old going on 10.
Answer 2:
As always Mr Vanrijngo knows things and owns things the rest of the world knows nothing of.
Answering # 2 above
Yeah, and as ignorant as some sound not even claiming their own writings to my answer, more than likely are and will remain the idiots that they sound like. To tell you the truth, these people will never claim their own writings because most have this 4 year BA degree that they likely struggled with and received on paper, while not doing them one bit of good. I'd say most of them have just wasted their time. They should all have become brewers.
You more than likely are as much of the problem that this whole MFA world is plague with. The French police along with other great minds of computer science and programing have discovered that about 50% of the art in this world is fake. Of these educated minds and of their studies, of their findings, now considered MFA works for sale in high end auction houses, ones out of exclusive collection, museums, and almost every artist foundation are in fact considered in that same category.
Now in exposing this to you, how would you like to buy a Salvidor Dali or a Andy Warhol if it were offered to you today at 1/2 of the sale price from the floor of their foundations?
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