Women Picking Olives (Q19911707)

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painting by Vincent van Gogh
  • Olive Picking
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English
Women Picking Olives
painting by Vincent van Gogh
  • Olive Picking

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the artist's brother Theo van Gogh, Paris (1890–d. 1891; sent to him by the artist on January 3, 1890); his widow, Johanna van Gogh-Bonger, Amsterdam, in trust for their son, Vincent Willem van Gogh (1891–95; consigned by June 1895 to Lucien Moline (Galerie Laffitte), Paris; sold with six other paintings for fl. 384 through Moline to an unidentified dealer; Moline sent a check on December 20 and Van Gogh-Bonger recorded it in her account book on December 23); [art dealer, Paris, from 1895]; Bernard Goudchaux, Paris; Dikran G. Kelekian, Paris and New York (by 1920–36; his sale, American Art Association, New York, January 30–31, 1922, no. 157, bought in for $4,400 by Joseph Brummer for Kelekian; sold on October 25, 1936, to Wildenstein); [Wildenstein, 1936–37; sold on July 13, 1937 for £5,000 to Schuster]; Sir Victor Schuster, London (1937; returned on November 1 to Wildenstein in exchange for "Olive Trees" by Van Gogh [MMA 1998.325.1]); [Wildenstein, London, from 1937]; A. Stoll (until no later than 1943; sold to Wildenstein); [Wildenstein, by 1943–49, stock no. 16404; sold on December 13, 1949 to Haupt]; Mr. and Mrs. Ira Haupt, New York (1949–his d. 1963); Mrs. Enid A. Haupt, New York (1963–83; sold in 1983 to Annenberg); her brother and his wife, Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg, Rancho Mirage, Calif. (1983–95; jointly with The Met, 1995–his d. 2002) (English)
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Women picking olives
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