From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cart with Black Ox
Artist Vincent van Gogh
Year1884
Catalogue
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions60.0 cm × 80.0 cm (23.6 in × 31.5 in)
Location Portland Art Museum, Portland

Cart with Black Ox, or The Ox-Cart, is an oil painting created in 1884 by Vincent van Gogh. It has been cited as one of his important early works. [1] [2]

Description

Created in the village of Nuenen before Van Gogh went to the South of France, the painting has a dark palette [1] and has been described as "disquieting"; the ox and cart are both decrepit. [3]

Cart with Black Ox was owned by a family who had bought it in 1950. It was donated in 2007 to the Portland Art Museum, [1] and as of 2010 is the most valuable gift yet made to the museum. [1] [2]

Curator Bruce Guenther argued, "The way the wheel becomes a definition lifted off the surface of the painting with the brush is Van Gogh establishing his vocabulary as a painter. He becomes Van Gogh here." [1]

In 2010, the painting was analyzed by digital X-ray and CT scanning to look for information on the artist's working methods and to add to the database at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. A painted-out flying bird was discovered. [2] A related painting made the same year, Cart with Red and White Ox, is in the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo, the Netherlands.

See also

References

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cart with Black Ox
Artist Vincent van Gogh
Year1884
Catalogue
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions60.0 cm × 80.0 cm (23.6 in × 31.5 in)
Location Portland Art Museum, Portland

Cart with Black Ox, or The Ox-Cart, is an oil painting created in 1884 by Vincent van Gogh. It has been cited as one of his important early works. [1] [2]

Description

Created in the village of Nuenen before Van Gogh went to the South of France, the painting has a dark palette [1] and has been described as "disquieting"; the ox and cart are both decrepit. [3]

Cart with Black Ox was owned by a family who had bought it in 1950. It was donated in 2007 to the Portland Art Museum, [1] and as of 2010 is the most valuable gift yet made to the museum. [1] [2]

Curator Bruce Guenther argued, "The way the wheel becomes a definition lifted off the surface of the painting with the brush is Van Gogh establishing his vocabulary as a painter. He becomes Van Gogh here." [1]

In 2010, the painting was analyzed by digital X-ray and CT scanning to look for information on the artist's working methods and to add to the database at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. A painted-out flying bird was discovered. [2] A related painting made the same year, Cart with Red and White Ox, is in the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo, the Netherlands.

See also

References

External links


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