Van Gogh painting worth $15M 'bought by unsuspecting fan for $50 in sale'

By Annabel Bate

Van Gogh painting worth $15M 'bought by unsuspecting fan for $50 in sale'

A NEVER-SEEN-BEFORE Vincent Van Gogh painting worth $15 million was likely bought by an art fan at a garage sale in Minnesota - for a mere $50.

The incredible unknown oil portrait depicts a fisherman with a pipe hanging from his mouth, created in 1889 - the same year van Gogh created his masterpiece The Starry Night, reports claim.

The unbelievable creation was bought at a Minnesota garage sale by an anonymous antiques collector for under $50 a mere few years ago.

But now it's estimated to be worth a whopping $15 million, according to a team of around 20 experts who have investigated the piece.

Former Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Maxwell Anderson told The Wall Street Journal: "[I was] struck by what I saw."

He said the smile lines depicted on the fisherman's face are of van Gogh's style.

And what's more, in the unbelievable discover, there was even a single red hair embedded in the paint - and that there was a single red hair embedded in the paint - the color of the famous artist's locks.

To find out whether it is indeed a Gogh piece, Anderson teamed up with a group of conservators, scientists and historians - who all now believe the work was made by the artistic genius, according to research.

Experts also matched red pigment in the painting to a brand of paint used in southern France in the late 19th century - where van Gogh was residing in a psychiatric ward at the time its thought he created the piece.

The piece is of a white bearded fisherman repairing his net with a pipe hanging out his mouth.

The word "Elimar" is also in the right-hand corner of the art - most likely the subject's name.

Anderson said in a statement: "This moving likeness embodies van Gogh's recurring theme of redemption, a concept frequently discussed in his letters and art.

"Through Elimar, van Gogh creates a form of spiritual self-portrait, allowing viewers to see the painter as he wished to be remembered."

The painting still requires checks by the Van Gosh Museum in Amsterdam before it's officially recognized as authentic.

Previously, the museum refused to attribute the artwork to Van Gogh when approached by its previous owner in December 2018.

While authenticating the art, the team of around 20 experts joined forces for the New York-based art research firm LMI Group - which bought the painting from the anonymous antiques collector in 2019.

LMI is confident that the art is genuine and said that the painting "is an emotionally rich, profoundly personal work created during the final and tumultuous chapter of van Gogh's life."

The report read: "The discovery of a previously unknown van Gogh painting should come as no surprise.

"It is well-known that van Gogh lost many works, gave away works to friends and was not particularly careful about any work he considered a study, of which there were many."

Van Gogh is thought to have suffered from a combination of bipolar and borderline personality disorder, but was never diagnosed with anything.

The Dutch artist produced around 900 paintings during his lifetime before dying by suicide in 1890 at 37 years old.

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