Stuff You Should Know - Seven - No, Wait, Five - Mysteries of the Art World
Episode Date: June 15, 2021When you get a bunch of artistic types together into a community – aka, the art world – some intrigue and mystery are bound to arise. Listen in as Chuck and Josh cover strangeness around Van Gogh,... Caravaggio, Raphael, and Vermeer – plus don’t miss Hilter! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Brian over there
and Jerry's here somewhere so this is Stuff You Should Know, the art world edition.
Yeah. You know what I just realized? We record these in twos and we just recorded the
Pogs episode. Right. And you didn't say welcome to the podcast.
I didn't, did I? What a missed opportunity for a great dad joke.
That sounds like something I would skip though even had I thought of it. I don't know that I
would have pulled the trigger on that. I think or I could see you pulling the trigger and then
making fun of yourself. Right, but I would have just been engaged in self-loathing for the rest
of the podcast. Well, retroactively I'm going to say I hope everyone enjoyed the podcast.
Now let's talk about art mysteries. I love this one man. This is great. This reminds me like of
a Stuff You Should Know episode from years back for some reason. Well, it's because we don't do
these top lists anymore. It's part of it. You know, very famously we used to have top tens on our
old House Stuff Works website of which usually there were maybe seven decent entries. So we never
did, I don't think we ever did a full 10 on anything. Maybe somebody could probably correct
this, but this one actually came in at seven. They didn't even try. And I don't even know,
we may do like five of these. We haven't even figured it out yet. We'll see. We're going to
play it fast and loose. I think that's another reason why it reminds me of an old Stuff You
Should Know episode. Fast and loose. Yeah, fast and loose. First you got the fast,
then you got the loose. But never furious. Because he wants to be mad. I don't know.
They should have called that series fast and loose. Tokyo Drift. I think I've heard before that
that series is the highest grossing movie franchise in the history of film worldwide. Yeah, you know
what's funny is at one point we were, this was years ago, we were talking with Ludacris about
doing something with the network. And I, because he's a local guy here in Atlanta, and I'd talk
to our boss and said, what's he doing these days? Like I haven't heard any music and he went,
he makes fast and furious movies. Like that's his job now. Yeah. Because he's just getting rich
off of making these movies. Like I can't even imagine. And plus also, I mean, they're pretty,
it's pretty involved movie making, I would guess. Like I'm sure because there's so many
stars involved that, you know, the shooting schedule for each one isn't necessarily,
you know, a year long endeavor or anything like that. And they probably have it down to
like a pretty fast science by now. But like, I would think that would eat up a pretty decent
amount of your time shooting one of those films every few, you know, a couple of times, well,
I guess every few years. I only saw one of those, I think. Man, I'm slowly like degenerating into
Bob Newhart, man. Have you noticed? Oh man, good. Yeah, you could degenerate into worse things than
that. But I mean, like, I'm really, I'm really hitting that Newhart note these days, I've noticed.
That's a great note. I love it. I've always wanted Bob Newhart as my podcasting partner, so.
Well, you, you've, you've, there you go. You've got it. All right. Number one on the list.
You want to talk a little Caravaggio? So Caravaggio is my new favorite painter. Oh, yeah?
Not just because he was a scummy lowlife swordsman. Murderer. Murderer, yeah.
He was a gambler. He would, he had weapons charges against him while he was alive. He,
he was not a good guy by any stretch of the imagination. Very troubled person is a really
polite way to put it. But if you look at his art, like I had no idea. I've seen like so many works
of his art and I never pieced together that they were the same person. And then when I really started
to read some criticism of his work, I'm like, oh my God, this guy, he's considered one of
the fathers of modern art. And this guy was painting at the beginning of the 17th century,
the early 1600s. And just like pogs, he burned hot and bright and fast. Amphirious, actually, sadly.
Oh, that's right. That wasn't even forced. Nice work, Bob.
Thanks. So Michelangelo Marisi de Caravaggio was Italian baroque painter. He, at one point in 1606,
killed a man named Romuccio Tomassani and said, I got to get out of here because I'm in big trouble
now and went to, went away from Rome and fled to Malta where he had a pretty brief, but I guess
notable stay. He was only there about six months and kind of hiding out and quickly hooked up
with the Knights of Malta and was briefly one of the Knights of Malta.
Like for a month. Yeah. And painted one of his most famous paintings there, the oil on canvas,
12 feet by 17 feet, the beheading of John the Baptist.
Yeah, it was an altar piece for the Order of St. John, also known as the Knights of Malta.
They were going to, again, put this behind the altar in their church on Malta,
and it was actually his little entry fee. They charge an entry fee, usually money,
to their initiates. Or pogs. But they accepted this altarpiece, this giant painting
of St. John the Baptist being beheaded. And it was actually, I mean, as far as Caravaggio goes,
especially toward the end of his life, it's actually fairly tame because there's not, you know,
like jets of blood spurting out. It's a pool of blood that's being shown.
He painted some really violent stuff. And like you said, that kind of,
he was a master of light and shadow. It's called Chiaroscuro. And he used it to really dramatic
effect, including in that painting. And in fact, one of the other paintings that you might have
seen of his Chuck, it's called Judith Beheading Holofernes. Have you seen it?
I have. So Judith, the woman who's in that painting, the woman who modeled for that,
for Judith, that was the woman that he killed Brannuccio Tomassoni over.
Right. Did you know that? I did. Oh, you did? Okay. Well, at any rate, while you-
Because they really, in this House of Works article, they called it a petty squabble,
and that really doesn't tell the story. Yeah. Another explanation I saw was that it was over
a tennis wager. And this was real tennis, not lawn tennis. And real tennis is kind of like this
kooky mix between squash and racquetball and tennis. And it's all indoors. And there's like
horse sheds basically involved that you can play off the roof stuff. It's really interesting stuff.
And he used to play that a lot too. But so it was either over a wager or it was over this woman.
Her name was, what was it? Judith. No, Phelidae. Phelidae, I believe, was the actual woman's name
who modeled for Judith. So he ends up on Malta. He becomes a knight. And when he becomes this
knight, he paints this altruistic piece and he signs his name in the pool of blood, which you're
like, well, he's an artist. That seems like something an artist would do, not Caravaggio.
This is actually the first and only work of his that he ever signed, which a lot of people are
like, okay, wait a minute, let's examine this. Yeah. And it kind of took a while for it to be
even very visible because it underwent some restorations over the years. And in the 1950s,
they did a restoration where they really could see the signature and what it said, I don't know
about for the first time, but like super clearly at least. And it said, F, period, dot.
F, Michelang, M-I-C-H-E-L-A-N-G. And then, you know, of course, everyone's like, well, what does
this mean? Because there is no F in his name. It's not like his initial. Is he saying, you know,
hey, screw Michelangelo? Myself? Screw me? Or I'm screwed? No, no one really said that. They
thought the F, there are a couple of different theories, thought it was shorthand for fratter,
or which means brother, because he was one of the knights. And maybe he just meant like brother
Michelangelo or whatever. And then some other people said, no, maybe it means stands for Fesset
F-E-C-I-T, which is Latin for did, translating basically into I did it, and it's spelled out in
blood, kind of confessing to his crime. Right. So that's kind of like where the mystery comes in,
was he confessing to the crime of murdering Renuccio Tomassoni? From what I saw most,
I can't say most, but the art historians and critics that I saw basically said, no, he almost
certainly wasn't doing that. For one, everybody knew that he did it. He'd already been convicted
in absentia. That's what I thought. So it's not like he was confessing to it. Although you can
make the case that he was confessing in the Catholic sense of the word, you know what I mean?
Right. Like before God. Yeah, exactly. Or de Beers. That painting still hangs at St. John's
Co-Cathedral in Malta too. Okay, yeah. Well, I mean, it was the altar piece. Like they, like it was a
big deal that they got their hands on it because he was a celebrated painter at the time already
in his lifetime. But the other interpretation that he was saying, F as in freighter or brother,
Michelangelo, about himself, that's probably the likelier version because he was at the time
seeking a pardon from the Pope so he could return to Rome. And by saying like, I'm in this holy
order. I'm basically like a Catholic holy man now, a leader of the church because the order of
St. John, the Knights of Malta have inducted me. He was basically shouting it loud and proud by
signing that one particular very holy painting that he did. But they said, nice try buddy.
And they kicked him out for being a quote, foul and rotten member, end quote. So it didn't work.
A month, after a month, dude, he lasted a month in the order of St. John. And it's not like they
ran around willy-nilly inducting people. Like they basically had no idea that they had,
what was Vic's last name in the shield? Vic Tabeck. No, not Vic Tabeck. I don't know,
I didn't watch the shield. Oh, you didn't. It was good. I rewatched like the last seven episodes
the other night over a couple of nights. It still holds up actually. But anyway, they didn't realize
that they had inducted him, the guy from the shield, and they figured it out pretty quickly. So
he made his way back from Malta to, I believe, Sicily on his way to Rome. And I think he actually
got a pardon and got into yet another squabble, another sword fight and sustained some wounds.
And between infected wounds, they think he got a staff infection, lead poisoning, he apparently
had gone rather mad from being exposed to the paints that he painted with. And then sun exposure,
sunstroke on the beach in Tuscany finally killed him. And so it goes. Yes, it does. But his paintings
are still just amazing. I can look at them all day, you know? Yeah, me too. I like this stuff.
I do too. So that's Caravaggio. How about Vermeer? Well, I think we should take a break. Oh gosh.
And we'll be back right after this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or
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And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot,
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Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life.
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Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. We had a great cliffhanger with Vermeer. Vermeer, the very famous Dutch artist,
Johannes Vermeer, had a very famous painting, a lot of very famous paintings, but one in particular
that has had a bunch of names over the years. In fact, it did not get the name Girl with a Pearl
Earring until the 20th century. It was called everything from Girl with a Turban to Girl with
an Earring. Had lots of different names because it was not officially titled by Vermeer nor dated
even though they think it was around 1665. Yeah. He was just like this dude who lived in Delft in
the Netherlands and never left his hometown and had a wife and 15 kids. 15. Yeah, 15 kids.
And just kind of painted and he made probably a comparatively small number of works. I think
around 36 are attributed to him. And there's a theory that as many as a fifth of those were
done by his oldest daughter, Maria. But he's kind of like this enigma at the time, not just
personally, but also the stuff he was painting. There was a huge movement among the Dutch painters
at the time that they would paint these horrific hellscapes or there was a lot of obvious narrative
and symbolism just all over the paintings. There was just a lot going on Vermeer went a different
way where he would almost peek in on very normal daily life and capture these really just kind
of boring or otherwise mundane moments. But he did it in a way that this guy was like the master
of light. He makes Thomas Kincaid look like puke as far as light mastery goes. So Girl with a
pearl earring. Everyone has seen it. Like I said, it's very famous. It's of a young girl.
It looks to be sort of like mid teenage years looking over her shoulder. She's wearing a dress.
She's wearing that turban. Very prominent earrings, large pearl earrings and pearls
factored into quite a few of his works over the years. And it's one of those paintings where the
eyes follow you supposedly, which we've talked about in one of our short stuff episodes.
I'm Mona Lisa. I think so. Yeah. It's the effect of the eyes following,
which doesn't happen in all paintings with eyes. Oh, no, the Mona Lisa's eyes actually
don't follow you. I think that was the big reveal of that one. Was it? Yeah. All right. So he paints
this painting and then of course the mystery of this one is who is this person? There has been
speculation that it might be a mistress. A lot of people think it was his daughter Maria who
would have been about 15 or 16. And like you said, who some people believe painted about a fifth of
the works attributed to him because about a fifth of his collected works aren't, I mean, this sounds
mean to say, but they aren't as, they aren't up to snuff compared to his other works. So they sort
of stand out from the rest. So they think that they may have been Maria's good paintings still.
Yeah. There's still a lot better than anything I could do. Yeah. It's not like they were stick
figures out of nowhere. They're like, this Vermeer seems off. But there was a 1999 novel
from Tracy Chevalier, The Girl with the Pearl Earring and then the 2000 film adaptation starring
Scarlett Johansson, who was perfectly cast. She looks quite a bit like The Girl with the Pearl
Earring. But this was historical fiction. If you've seen that movie and you're like, no,
she was the family's maid's assistant and love interest to Vermeer, that was just, I don't even
think that was based on anything. It's just historical fiction. Yes. From what I've seen,
critics and historians basically tend to think that there was no person that this was modeled on.
There, it wasn't even necessarily his daughter. In fact, it was kind of a trend at the time,
a painting called a Tronie, which was an imaginary figure, a person who didn't actually exist.
The point was to kind of show off things like costumes and jewelry, which is ostensibly the
point of that painting. But the thing is the Vermeer, the face that he did and the place that
he put her. We were talking about how she gets compared to Mona Lisa. She's called the Mona
Lisa of the North. Mona Lisa is sitting back in the painting. The Girl with the Pearl Earring is
right in the foreground. There's very little between you and her. She's turned around in her
mouth's open, which apparently was very unusual for Dutch painting at the time. It looks like
she's going to say something. I guess that is what entrances people with this image that what
she's going to say, what did he capture her about to say? It looks like she's turning around like,
oh, and this other thing I hadn't told you. Maybe she was an improv comedian and she was
yes and you never know. But this is a mystery that will never be solved, which sometimes I
like those kind of mysteries when it comes to stuff like this. Yeah. And I saw that argued as
well that it was like, if we knew who she was, we would lose a lot of the interest in it.
And we would have found out by now, I think. Yes. Yeah, and you're right. We probably won't ever know.
But because of this, so like it wasn't like very well thought of or nobody really thought much of
it until 1995 in the National Gallery used it as the poster for their big exhibit. But since then,
a lot of people have really kind of examined it. And I hadn't noticed this before, but I saw it,
pointed out, Chuck, if you look at the Pearl Earring, first of all, it's improbably large is how I
saw it described, like that the ear couldn't physically hold up a pearl that size. But then
secondly, it's really basically made with two brushstrokes, both of them are reflecting light.
One is from the light source and then the lower one is reflecting the light off of the collar.
And it's pretty amazing that, you know, we talk about this, the girl with the pearl earring and
this pearl itself is like a kind of a cultural icon too. And it's basically just two brushstrokes,
which is kind of goes to show how great Vermeer was. Amazing. Have you ever seen Tim's Vermeer,
the documentary? I have not. Oh, Chuck, you've got to see it. It's directed by Teller from Penn and
Teller, which makes you think like, how did he direct if he doesn't talk, you know, but he somehow
did. I think he talks in private. It's about what? That's just a bit. And it's about a guy who
basically figured out that Vermeer somehow projected images that he built in real life
onto a canvas and then painted them that way. And he actually replicates a Vermeer like perfectly.
It's really just one of the better documentaries you'll ever see. Very cool. Yeah. So what do you
think, Andorrafe? Yeah. So the mystery here, and this is one of our, this actually has a
Simpsons crossover as well, which is kind of fun because Raphael painted a very famous painting
called Portrait of a Young Man and is largely described as one of the most famous, if not the
most famous pieces of art to go missing during the plundering of great art in World War II
by Hitler and the gang. And this is a crossover with the Simpsons in that in the Fighting Healthish
episode when Grandpa Abe and Burns are stealing art. This is one of the paintings Portrait of a
Young Man. It's one of the paintings that they stole, which shows that Simpsons writers back
then at least were definitely doing their work, like their research work, because that's a nice
little Easter egg, I think. Yeah, totally. Doesn't it even talk? Doesn't it say something like
someone's guilty conscience or something? I don't know. Am I making that up? I don't know. I don't
remember. I mean, it's been a long time since I've seen that one, but it was one of the great
episodes, I think. So the Portrait of a Young Man, which they think was a Raphael self-portrait,
and actually we have no idea what the colors were because the only photographs we have of it
were in black and white, but he used to hang in the Princes Zartorski Museum in Poland,
along with two other really important paintings. Leonardo's Lady with an Irmine, which is a
scout, stote, I can't remember, kind of a weasel-like animal, and then Rembrandt's landscape with the
Good Samaritan. And all three of those and everything else in the Princes Zartorski Museum
were swiped by the Nazis when they came to Poland and placed in the office of a guy named Hans
Frank, who was the head of the government for the Nazis in Poland, right? Yeah, and you know,
they almost got these hidden away successfully. When Poland was being invaded, they knew that
the art was going to be plundered. And so those three paintings were actually rescued by the
Prince and hidden away in a house in a place that I can't even pronounce, Sienowa. I'm not sure
what that is, but they were ultimately found by the Gestapo and handed over to Frank. And Frank,
you know, they were supposed to go to Hitler. Hitler was going to open a museum, the Führer
Museum in Lenz. And Frank actually kind of kept it for a little while, hung it in his residence,
and then eventually this thing went to Germany and then Austria for a little while and then back
with Frank in 1945. Which seems crazy and probable that they would end up back with him, but they
did. And the Allies came in to Poland, I guess, and arrested Hans Frank in 1945, and they were
able to find the lady with an ermine and the landscape with the Good Samaritan, but the portrait
of the young man was nowhere to be found. Yeah, they found a lot of other stuff too. Sure, they
definitely did, but the three most important pieces in the Prince's Zartarski Museum were those three,
and two were recovered, one wasn't. And it's very odd to think that they were separated at any time,
or that it's even odd to think that two were kept together, but one wasn't. And so, because the
portrait of the young man was not recovered, and it's a Raphael, who's, you know, one of the great
Italian Renaissance painters, it's considered maybe the most important piece to go missing in World War
II. Yeah, and they, you know, along with, I think, over 800 other artifacts they got from him, and
they could not go on to question him very long, because he was executed just a year later. And
since then, there have been a lot of rumors about where this thing ended up. Who has it? A lot of
speculation that maybe a private collector in another country has it. I think in 2012, there
was a false report that it was supposedly in some bank vault, and they really don't know. It's just
sort of one of those great mysteries of a disappeared painting, and my money is on a private collector,
probably has this thing stashed away, but you would also think that at some point somebody would talk.
You would think so, and, you know, maybe they will eventually. Unless it's really stashed.
Well, some people think it was destroyed, and that movie Monuments Men, they show the Nazis
igniting it with the flamethrower in a cave with a bunch of other art. And there's, you know,
there's a whole camp that says, now this thing is, it's gone forever. So they did something to it,
because the Nazis were known not just plunder, but also destroy art as well, which just one more
reason to love them Nazis. Yeah. And I think this is oil on panel. So it's, I don't think this could
even be like rolled up in a tube and put under your bed or anything. Yeah, I would guess not. No,
I didn't realize it was on panel, but that makes sense. But the state, the National Museum in
Krakow bought the entire Princess Zarkotorsky collection from a private collector for 100
million euros back in 2016. And that I know. And that included the rights to portrait of a young man
in case it's ever found. And for now, it just, they have the original frame hanging empty in the
in the gallery. Oh, yeah. That's, it turns out that's a thing I didn't know was a thing.
But it frames in galleries. It's kind of sad. Yeah, it's sad. It's very poignant. It says,
come home. Yeah. Come home. We're leaving the light on for you. Come home. Just like Motel 6.
I'm Tom Brokaw. We'll leave the light on for you. All right. Well, that means it's time for another
break. And we'll be back right after this to talk a little bit about Van Gogh.
My favorite boy bands give me in this situation. If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah,
we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you
through life step by step. Not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikala. And to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India.
It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't
look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the
iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So Chuck, before I launch into a Saka Go-Way type tirade onto you, is that how you accurately
pronounce his name? I don't know. It was from the filmmaker who dare not speak his name. It was from
a Woody Allen movie. I think it was in the most problematic movie, Manhattan, when he's with
Diane Keaton and some obnoxious person says, or I think it's Diane Keaton says Van Gogh and he's
in sense. He's like Van Gogh, like how pretentious. So okay, so instead we're just going to go with
Van Gogh like everybody else, right? Yeah, sure. Okay. And we can cut all that out if we want to
don't even want to talk about Woody Allen. That's fine. Sure, sure. I hear you. So Van Gogh was
most, he was just such a sad, tragic figure. I feel for this guy so much after learning more
about him. We should do an entire podcast on him if you ask me. Agreed. But instead here we're
going to talk about his death because there is a mystery surrounding his death. He's very famous
for having cut off his ear. He definitely did that and I had always learned that he did it to
impress a sex worker who he was enamored with and he definitely did give her his ear after he cut
it off. But that's not why he cut it off. He cut it off in a fit of angst basically after having
an argument with his friend Paul Gauguin who he was living with in Arles in the south of France.
And he said, well, I'm going to make some sort of lemonade out of this lemon I just gave myself
and he took it to his, I guess, hopeful girlfriend and I believe she was not that impressed with it.
Yeah. So he suffered from definitely depression. There is speculation that he had bipolar disorder.
Yeah, I saw that too.
Was, you know, just sort of long suffering as an artist. He didn't, he only sold one painting
before he died in 1890 at the age of 37. And the story goes is that he shot himself in the chest
with a revolver. But it gets a little more complicated than that. And in what year was the book?
In 2011, there was a book written called Van Gogh, colon, the life written by Stephen,
I'm going to say Maifa and Gregory White Smith. And it seems like they sort of launched this idea,
or at least really put it in the public forefront, that he was actually killed almost
certainly accidentally by one of two boys, a younger gentleman that he was hanging out with that day.
Right. So here's the thing like there's a lot of circumstantial evidence
that supports that theory that he was killed by two boys. I buy it. There's also, it's also
circumstantially plausible that, you know, Van Gogh died by suicide as well. But even if you take
his story and start digging into it in the statements that he made, supposedly made, apparently
everything we know about it comes from the owner of the inn where he rented a room's 13 year old
daughter at the time. Right. He was a witness to all this. But even if you take what he supposedly
said, it still doesn't add up that number one, he shot himself in the chest. And most importantly,
the number two, the gun that he shot himself with could never be found. And instead of actually,
you know, finishing the suicide, completing the suicide, he couldn't find the gun after he shot
himself in the chest and just walked back to his room where he died after suffering 20 more hours.
But still to the end claiming that he had done this himself. Even if you take all that together,
it seems like no, this is something really fishy going on here. Yeah. So this bullet misses all
of his internal organs, very improbably, because it deflected off his rib cage. And he walked,
like you said, to the doctor who they didn't have a surgeon on duty, so they couldn't remove the bullet.
He lived a total of 30 hours after the shot and died of infection, got to talk with his brother,
you know, was was speaking to people. So he had every opportunity to say that these two boys
that I was hanging out with that I was drinking, and I say boys, I think they were maybe late teens,
early 20s. No, they were 16. Oh, okay, I saw early 20s and another thing. Oh, yeah. But, you know,
hanging out, getting drunk with them. One of these boys, Renee Sakratin, had a gun that apparently
misfired a lot. And he liked playing with this thing. He liked to play cowboy, supposedly. He
did. And so it all just seems, and even his statement, he said, he didn't say, I shot myself.
He said, do not accuse anyone. It was I who wanted to kill myself. Yeah, which is very
peculiar as well. Yeah, for sure. It's ambiguous, I think, as far as like, because the idea is that
maybe he was accidentally shot. And then after he was shot, he was like, this is kind of what I
wanted all along, you know, I've been heading down this road toward suicide. And then now it's just
done for me. So what what seems to have happened is that this gun, possibly that it wasn't actually
murder or any kind of premeditated murder, more like a manslaughter where Renee and his brother
guest on were messing around and accidentally, basically, he had seen a Wild Bill Cody Wild West
show the year before and became obsessed with it. So that's what he was doing with the gun and playing
cowboy and that they had accidentally shot him with this gun that was kind of, you know, known to
misfire. So the thing was that the gun was never found. Renee went back to school, like right after
that, which was still in the middle of summer break from what I saw. And the town seems to have
circled the wagons around these boys because, you know, Van Gogh was an outsider. He was not very
well thought of. He used to get really drunk and argue with the locals in the cafe and everything,
like basically every night. And these boys came from like a good, well-to-do family. So for many
years, like that was just the thing, like it just happened. And then slowly, little by little,
it seems to have trickled out some support for this idea, like no, like Van Gogh wasn't anywhere
near this field. He said that he had shot himself in. He was actually on the road to the secretary's
house. And then finally, years later, Renee's secretary said that, you know, he probably was
his gun and that Van Gogh had somehow gotten a hold of it. It seems likely that he was shot
by them, whether accident or not. Yeah. And these two authors, they put forth some other
circumstantial evidence, like that the bullet went in at a weird angle that would not have been the
angle if you shot yourself in the chest. That his more recent works were a little more upbeat
and a little more positive. And that he was not in that kind of mindset at the time. And that he
had recently even written his thoughts about suicide that he thought it was sinful and immoral.
And so they sort of use all this as evidence that he would not have done it himself.
And that it was, you know, they believe it was an accident. His last words, very sad, were,
the sadness will last forever. He spoke to his brother, which that's tough.
Yeah, it is. I really do want to do an episode on him.
And I think Sekretan came out in the fifties even and denied it, right? Like finally, once and for
all. He did. He did. But he also said that it probably was his gun and that somehow Van Gogh had
gotten it. Right. But hey, that ain't my fault. No, but also to backpedal and be like, it probably
was my gun, because that was another thing. Everybody's like, where did Van Gogh get a gun?
Van Gogh didn't have a gun. No, and no one would have given Van Gogh a gun. He was the guy who
got drunk every night and had cut off his ear before. That was like, they, no one in town
would have given him a gun. So the fact that he even admitted that it was his gun is probably as
close as Renee Sekretan ever came to confessing publicly about it, you know? Yeah. And it makes
sense what he said was, do not accuse anyone. Like that really seems like he's trying to cover for
these kids that he didn't want to get in trouble. Yeah, because if he wanted to die, but it was also
he didn't want to die by his own hand. Like this is kind of a lucky gift in a very strange way,
you know? Yeah. I'm going to that immersive Van Gogh thing in July. Where is that? It is here in
Atlanta. It's at the Pullman Yards over in Kirkwood where they shoot like every movie in
Atlanta shoots there. Right. Yeah. So yeah, it's supposed to be pretty cool. It's very, very neat.
Very neat. Sounds neat. I mean, like basically they just make the stars come out whenever you
come in and come sit in this yellow chair. I think that's the deal. I think you go in and you are
surrounded by projected art in different ways from what I can get. Oh, I got to check that out,
man. Thanks for telling me about it. Yeah, it looks kind of cool. All right, Chuck, you want to
finish out talking about Hitler? Don't you mean Hylter? Did you notice that? Is he in there as Hylter?
Oh my gosh, yes, in the headline. In the headline, did Hylter really do these paintings? Do these
paintings? Who wrote that? I feel bad, but like, did Hylter really do these paintings?
That's great, man. Oh yeah, he did them. Yeah, Hylter did these paintings.
So we're talking not about Hylter, but about Hitler, Adolf Hitler in particular. And as
everybody knows, Hitler was a frustrated artist. Yeah, big time. You know, people have made a lot
of hay about how possibly the world would be a totally different place had he been accepted
into the Vienna Academy of Arts. And he came, well, I don't want to say he came close,
but he made two different attempts in one year to be accepted. And they basically looked at
his stuff and said, look, man, you have the skill of a draftsman, maybe you should go into
architecture, like, but you're not going to be an artist. And he said architecture?
That was a direct quote. But this was a huge deal for him. I think I read in that in Mein Kampf,
I haven't read Mein Kampf, but I read an article by somebody who read Mein Kampf and said that he
said it was like a bolt from the blue and that, you know, he was pursuing this dream that his
father would like beat him out of, like his father enrolled him in a technical school. He was like,
no son of mine is going to be an artist. He would beat him up whenever he brought the idea up.
And so finally, after his father died, and then he nursed his mailing mother until she died,
he got up the gumption to like go and enroll in art school. And apparently he, being Hitler,
who I guess has been fairly bonkers his whole life, just knew that he was destined to become an
artist. So the idea that he was rebuffed not once, but twice by this Vienna school, these people
were like the guardians of what is art and what is not. And they were telling him, what you got is
not. That was a huge deal to him. It was a very big deal. And it's funny. It's just now occurring
to me that there was sort of a similar thing with Manson's rejection as a musician by the music
industry. I didn't really kind of really thought of that parallel. But in 1909, Hitler is traipsing
around Vienna, and he is selling watercolors copied from postcards to tourists. So if you've ever
traveled to Europe, he was one of those guys that was down by the river, the river bank.
In a van? Yeah, in a van selling these and literally copied from postcards. So he did that for a
little while, made a little bit of money. Because if you look at his art, it's way better than I
could do. It's okay. It's hard to tell if modern art critics so much goes into looking at a Hitler
painting and reviewing it. It's really hard to kind of separate those things. But the general
thought is that he had nothing exceptional about him at all. He was the kind of artist that would
sell stuff down by the river to tourists. They were fine. He was capable. But they were copycat
paintings. He was copying things. He had no point of view. He did this in 1913 as well in Munich,
painting Munich cityscapes and landscapes and selling them to tourists. And then in 1914,
got hauled in by the police of all things for failing to register for the military.
Yeah. And then he went down and registered and then they gave him a physical exam and he failed
it. They said it was too weak to fire a weapon. So they arrested him so that they could humiliate
him basically. And then when World War I came around, he enlisted and they say, we need everybody
we can get, come on in. And he actually did fight. Even Hilter did this army thing.
So when he rose to power in Germany, one of the things he did was he had his works
collected and destroyed. I'm not exactly sure what the thinking was behind that. I guess because
he knew it wasn't very good. And he needed to focus on his political career rather than his
artistic career or have everybody else focus on it. But to no avail because I saw a 1936
critic or a critic wrote in 1936 that his style was prosaic, utterly devoid of rhythm,
color, feeling, or spiritualism. And this was before he, I'm sorry, or spiritual imagination.
And this was before he had really become an obvious threat. This is 1936. So even back then,
even without hindsight, people thought his stuff wasn't very good. So yeah, he had his stuff
destroyed. And it was kind of a footnote for a very long time that he was an artist and no one
really cared after his death. Yeah. I mean, this, and that was one of the major reasons that he was
such an art plunderer during the war and stole as much art as he could from real famous artists
and famous paintings because he had all this backstory as a failed artist. And it was interesting.
I did see that like one of his major, I mean, because he wasn't an utter failure at first. He
had a backer early on, I think he was a Jewish man. Yeah, Morgenstern. Yeah, which was really
interesting. And there was, I don't know, man, it's, there's a lot of speculation about
what that all meant to him. And like people try and draw parallels to like some of the paintings.
I saw, I mean, some of it feels like a stretch, definitely like the, you know, the cold,
the cold streets of Munich like were painted like clearly with a future cleansing in mind to make it
look like this. And it's a stretch. Yeah, some of that stuff seems like a stretch, but you could
definitely read into the backstory at least, I think, with some accuracy. Yeah. And even if like
you can't necessarily suss out like the future from, from his paintings, you can make a pretty
strong case that his artistic ambitions being utterly crushed had some sort of driving force
or impact on his psyche at the very least. Sure. Like that and his, his later political career
and dictatorship did not exist in a vacuum. I don't think you can possibly make the case that
they were just unrelated in any way. No, I think any sociopath, you can look at their past and see
their past and see the dots connected, you know? Yeah. So like you said, there was this kind of
just was the deal for a long time. And then in like anything else, like people wanting to
get original Charles Manson music reels in the early late 90s, early 2000s, there was a market
for Hitler's work. I think in 2009, a British auction house, someone paid 150 grand for 15
early sketches and watercolors, including a self-portrait. And then in 2015, some unnamed
investors paid $450,000 for a set of watercolors. I think there were 12 or 13 that survived.
Yeah. The problem is, is because he didn't have a style of his own, that he was copying postcards,
that he didn't have any formal training and that he was, he lacked like a lot of creativity
or any creativity, it seems like. It's really hard to say this is a Hitler and this is a fake.
And there's been, developed a really, a really enormous market of fakes because anybody who's
like a passingly good artist in watercolors of streetscapes and landscapes could drum up something
and be like, this is a Hitler. And it would be really difficult to say yes, it is or no, it's not.
Yeah. What kind of a garbage human do you have to be to think, I'll do Hitler forgeries and try
and sell them to garbage humans that want to collect them? Yeah. And it's not like these
are even fetching like $10 million a piece. We're talking like you might get $10,000 for it,
for your Hitler forgery. Unbelievable. But totally believable.
So that's the mystery of the Hitler paintings. Did he do this?
Yeah. Did he do those paintings? You got anything else?
I got nothing else. That was a good five. I think we have committed to doing a robust
episode on the Gardner Museum heist because that's a good one. And that was on this list
and way underplayed. For sure. So keep an ear out for that, everybody. And since I said keep
an ear out for that, I think it's time for Listener Mail.
Yeah. I'm going to call this
middle names because we had a little discussion in our John Muir episode about how Emily and I
and our friends, Justin and Melissa one night, were going by our middle names as a joke.
And I had the theory that you have no emotional connection to your middle name if you
don't have a reaction when you hear it said out loud. And I just meant sort of the non-dominant
name. It didn't necessarily mean middle names because my brother goes by his middle name.
Scott is his middle name and some people do that. It's a thing. And certainly Amy does.
She said I was listening to the show and at the end you were chatting about using middle names
and how you don't have an emotional connection when you hear it. I have an interesting situation
that everyone, everyone in my family uses their middle names. So I've always been called Amy
ever since I was born, but my first name is Helen. This causes an interesting situation
at airports and doctor's appointments where they refer to me as Helen. And I always have to remember
that they're talking to me. A big fan of the show kept me curious and my curious spirit
satisfied over the last three or four years. And it's such a comfort knowing there's always
another episode to listen to. Best wishes from the UK. They're always so nice. And that is from
Amy, Helen Amy. Thanks Helen Amy. We'll just call her Amy as his customary.
Yeah, because we say Helen. She's like, who? Yeah. Wow. I can't wait until they read my
listener mail says Amy. If you want to be like Amy and get in touch with us for whatever reason,
you can send us an email to stuffpodcast.iheartradio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio. For more podcasts, My Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart Podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you ever think to yourself
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on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chatikular and it turns out astrology
is way more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find it in major league baseball,
international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
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