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Undated handout picture shows a painting underneath Van Gogh's famous work 'Patch of grass' in Hamburg. Scientists have made a coloured view of an early rejected painting underneath Vincent van Gogh's 'Patch of Grass' painting, using advanced X-ray techniques, a Dutch university said on Wednesday.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhuanet)-- European
scientists have reconstructed a portrait of a peasant woman painted by Vincent
van Gogh that had been concealed beneath another painting for 121 years,
according to media reports on Wednesday.
Joris Dik, a materials scientist from
Delft University, and Koen Janssens, a chemist from the University of Antwerp in
Belgium, used synchrotron X-rays from a particle accelerator to determine what
the original painting looked like before he covered it up with his landscape
"Patch of Grass," which is part of the large his collection in the
Kroller-Muller Museum in the Netherlands.
"We visualized ¡ª in great detail ¡ª the nose, the eyes,
according to the chemical composition." Dik said. Scanning a roughly 7-inch
square of the larger portrait took two full days.
While not exact in every detail, the image produced is a
woman's head that may be the same model Van Gogh painted in a series of
portraits leading up to the 1885 masterpiece "The Potato Eaters."
The new method will allow art historians to obtain higher
quality and more detailed images underlying old masterpieces.
Though his paintings are now worth millions, van Gogh was
virtually unknown during his lifetime and struggled financially before
committing suicide in 1890.
He often reused canvas to save money, either painting on
the back or over the top of existing paintings, and experts believe roughly a
third of his works hide a second painting underneath.
(Agencies)