The Mystery of the Disappearing van Gogh
The Mystery of the Disappearing van Gogh
The bidding for Lot 17 started at $23 million.
In the packed room at Sothebys in Manhattan, the price quickly climbed: $32 million, $42 million, $48 million. Then a new prospective buyer, calling from China, made it a contest between just two people.
On the block that evening in November 2014 were works by Impressionist painters and Modernist sculptors that would make the auction the mostsuccessful yet in the firms history. But one painting drew particular attention: Still Life, Vase with Daisies and Poppies, completed by Vincent van Gogh weeks before his death.
Pushing the price to almost $62 million, the Chinese caller prevailed. His offer was the highest ever for a van Gogh still life at auction.
In the discreet world of high-end art, buyers often remain anonymous. But the winning bidder, a prominent movie producer, would proclaim in interview after interview that he was the paintings new owner.
The producer, Wang Zhongjun, was on a roll. His company had just helped bring Fury, the World War II movie starring Brad Pitt, to cinemas. He dreamed of making his business Chinas version of the Walt Disney Company.