Two paintings by Vincent Van Gogh, stolen from a museum 17 years ago, have finally returned to the public eye.
Van Gogh Museum
After a 14-year search and an investigation into a group linked to the Italian mafia, authorities recovered the paintings in Italy in 2016.
Museum staff spent two years examining the damage to the paintings and restoring them. On Wednesday, they hung them up again in the museum's galleries.
"The conservators have done a brilliant job and the paintings will now go back on permanent display in their full glory, for everyone to see."
Both paintings required conservation treatment
The paintings, which date from the 1880s, underwent conservation treatment before they returned to public display.
Stolen Van Gogh paintings found after 14 years in raid on Italian mafia group
"View of the Sea at Scheveningen," one of Van Gogh's earliest works in oil paint, was damaged during its time away from the museum. It is is one of only two seascapes that Van Gogh painted in the Netherlands, according to the museum.
Van Gogh painted "View of the Sea at Scheveningen" in 1882 while living in The Hague. It's one of his first oil paintings. Credit: Van Gogh Museum
During the conservation treatment process, they found the remains of a signature "Vincent." However, the museum believes that Van Gogh himself did not write it.
Fortunately, "Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen," sustained hardly any damage, the museum said. The painting depicts the church in Nuenen, a city in the Netherlands, where Van Gogh's father was the minister.
Van Gogh painted "Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen" to cheer up his mother after she broke her leg and had to stay in bed. Credit: Van Gogh Museum
The museum found that both paintings were covered with a varnish that wasn't there before and had yellowed over time. Conservators removed the layers of varnish and retouched the paintings.
In the process of removing varnish from "Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen," they discovered another varnish layer that Van Gogh likely applied himself. It is protein based and marks the first time that such a varnish layer has been found in the painter's early work.
The museum also selected new frames for both paintings because the thieves removed the previous ones.
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