Vincent van Gogh‘s work is in such high demand for exhibitions around the world that it’s rare to find all 16 of the Metropolitan Museum of Art‘s paintings by the Dutch master at home together in New York at one time. But now, for the first time in four years, the Met’s full set of van Gogh paintings are on view at the museum in galleries 822 and 825.

“In the spring, van Gogh’s Oleanders [1888] returned from a three-venue showing of ‘Van Gogh & Japan,’ held in Sapporo, Tokyo, and Kyoto. Our L’Arlésienne [1888–89] was among the highlights of the [exhibition’s] Amsterdam venue, which just closed at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in late June,” said Susan Stein, the Met’s curator of 19th-century European painting, in an email to artnet News.

Eight of the Met's paintings by Vincent van Gogh, as currently installed in gallery 825. Photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Eight of the Met’s paintings by Vincent van Gogh, currently installed in gallery 825. Photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Other paintings that have been traveling since all 16 van Goghs were last seen together include The Flowering Orchard (1888), which visited the Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen, for the exhibition “Japanomania 1875–1918”; and Cypresses (1889), which made the trip to the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts, for “Van Gogh and Nature.”

“Closer to home,” Stein added, “Van Gogh’s Irises [1890] and Sunflowers [1887] were included in the Met’s exhibition ‘Public Parks, Private Gardens: Paris to Provence,’ where they enjoyed their place in a gallery that traced the revival of flower painting in late 19th-century France.”

Vincent van Gogh, <em>Irises</em> (1890). Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, gift of Adele R. Levy, 1958.

Vincent van Gogh, Irises (1890). Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, gift of Adele R. Levy, 1958.

There are some Van Goghs, however, that visitors can always count on seeing at the Met. Self-Portrait With a Straw Hat (1887) and Wheat Field With Cypresses (1889), perhaps the museum’s best-known works by the artist, along with Irises, haven’t gone on tour since their respective acquisitions in 1967 and 1993, due in part to conservation concerns. And when the museum acquired seven van Gogh works from the Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg Collection in 2002, it was with the express provision that the works never be loaned out to other institutions.

Only one van Gogh painting from the museum’s collection is missing from the new gallery hang: Madame Roulin and Her Baby (1888), which is actually part of the Lehman Collection and is therefore typically shown in the Lehman Wing, rather than in the European painting galleries. The canvas is about to go on view at the Frans Halsmuseum in Haarlem, Netherlands, in “Franz Hals and the Modernists” (October 12, 2018–February 24, 2019).

Vincent van Gogh, <em>Wheat Field with Cypresses</em> (1889). Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Vincent van Gogh, Wheat Field with Cypresses (1889). Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Met’s van Gogh holdings also include six drawings, with one in the Lehman Collection and the rest in the drawings and prints department. The reunited paintings will be together on view through at least mid-February of next year. In a blog post, Alison Hokanson, the department’s assistant curator, called this a “not-to-be-missed occasion.”

All 16 Vincent van Gogh paintings will be on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, in galleries 822 and 825, through at least late February 2019. 

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