Today's photo-of-the-day is from the exhibit "Van Gogh and the Olive Groves" at the Dallas Museum of Art. It includes a series of paintings made between June and December, 1889, while Van Gogh was a patient at the asylum of Saint-Rémy. The man was clearly on a roll in the last year of his life. One Van Gogh painting (not in this exhibit) sold at auction in 2017 for $81 million dollars. Going by that, this one small room in the DMA contains perhaps a billion dollars worth of art. The exhibit has a letter from Van Gogh to his brother on display in which Van Gogh said he was working on a series of of paintings of olive groves with a hope of selling them for "ornamentation for bourgeoisie homes." That's some decoration!
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His cousin Freddie brought him on the heist one hot night in early
June. Ray Carney was having one of his run-around days—uptown,
downtown, zipping across the city. Keeping the machine humming. First
up was Radio Row, to unload the final three consoles, two RCAs and a
Magnavox, and pick up the TV he left."


