Ferdinand Marcos, the former president, and his wife Imelda owned one of Vincent’s peasant scenes. Did it end up in Japan?
These five missing paintings might still survive—possibly looted and secreted away
Vincent’s note to his artist friend Emile Bernard is to be included in an exhibition of the Springer Collection at Madrid’s Thyssen Museum
Peach Trees in Blossom was inspired by Vincent’s love of Japanese prints
Why did Vincent paint “Poplars near Nuenen” on top of an earlier picture of a church? And was the final picture touched up after he discovered Impressionism in Paris?
The show “Van Gogh in America” opens at the Detroit Institute of Arts in October
Vincent writes philosophically about his mental illness, a year after mutilating his ear
The artist’s imprint was probably left when he carried the picture back to the asylum
Vincent’s beloved bloom will eventually flourish again in the war-torn country
Vincent declared that a cartoon in Punch magazine was greater than Holbein's Dance of Death
Christie’s uncovers records revealing that Obach & Co marketed a landscape drawing in 1910
Christie’s is to offer the never-exhibited painting in a New York auction in May
Other views of Vincent, captured by his fellow artists, reproduced together online for the first time
London gallery says it never meant to "present an insensitive or dismissive attitude" to mental health issues
Sotheby’s will auction the surviving picture of the strolling couple on 2 March, estimated at £7m-£10m
Plus, Van Gogh’s self-portraits in London, and the story of when Dalí met Freud
Revelations about The Red Vineyard, just conserved at Moscow’s Pushkin Museum
The Courtauld exhibition will be the first ever with works from Vincent’s full career, opening on 3 February
What happened to the 1923 plan for a Grand Museum to house the collection of Helene Kröller-Müller
Vincent wanted to sell the set for under a dollar as “art for the people”—the museum will have paid several million
With shows in London, Vienna, four American cities and of course Amsterdam—I choose the highlight of the year
From insects trapped in paint and Vincent's support of a brass band to the scene depicted in his final picture—plus it was suicide (not murder)
The Kröller-Müller Museum painting will be unveiled in the Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition
Vincent told his artist friend Paul Signac that the fish stood for the gendarmes who hassled him after he mutilated his ear
The Oracle Corporation co-founder owns the painting that hung above J.F. Kennedy’s hotel bed on the morning of his assassination—and the president’s final telephone call was about Van Gogh
But is it one exhibition or two? Surprisingly, Through Vincent’s Eyes: Van Gogh and His Sources will be quite different when it travels next year to California
For the artist who failed to sell during his lifetime, there is now a surge in the market for Vincent’s late paintings
Vincent’s picture of wheatstacks is coming up at Christie’s on 11 November—yours for around $25m
Steven Naifeh, co-author of the best-selling biography, writes about the painters Vincent admired—and collects their pictures