According to another article (Un Van Gogh déniché aux puces, November 29) from Radio Télévision Belge Francophone (RTBF), the man who bought the painting at the flea market wants to sell it now for a good reason:
Convinced of his discovery's value, the owner, who now lives in Bordeaux, hopes to gain more than three million euros. This man in his 40s, who wants to remain completely anonymous, hopes to be able to stop working, thanks to this sale, and realize an old dream: devoting himself to painting.Specialists at Sotheby's deferred judgment to two Van Gogh scholars at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, who both concluded that the work was a forgery. However, an independent specialist named Benoît Landais claims to have identified the work in the catalogue of Van Gogh's paintings made by his brother, Theo, and in the painter's letters. M. Landais has been making waves in the art world for several years now, by claiming that some paintings accepted as Van Gogh's are not authentic. By carefully studying the painter's life, he claims to have traced a large number of Van Gogh's youthful works that were kept in storage in Breda until 1903, which he rediscovered in 1999. M. Landais believes that this painting is from the same period, 1883, painted in the area around Drenthe, in northern Holland, and then lost somewhere in transport to Breda. Some 150 of these paintings, attributed to Van Gogh, are on exhibit at the Breda Museum until February 1, 2004. (See Martin Bailey's article Lost Van Goghs Found? in The Art Newspaper, November 25). The vast majority of Van Gogh paintings that are "discovered" turn out to be fakes.
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