Van Gogh Museum houses the largest collection of Van Gogh paintings in the world. The museum welcomed 1.86 million visitors in 2025. Of this, around 1.5 million were international visitors. Dutch citizens accounted for 350,000 visits. The museum regulates ticket sales to escape overcrowding.
Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter and foundational figure in modern art. In just a decade, he produced over 2,100 artworks defined by bold colours and dramatic brushwork. He is celebrated globally for his masterpieces despite battling severe mental illness and poverty during his life.
The Museum History
The nucleus of the Van Gogh Museum’s collection was that of Theo van Gogh, Vincent van Gogh’s younger brother. It remained in the van Gogh family until 1962. Then Vincent Willem van Gogh, the artist’s nephew, donated the collection to the Vincent van Gogh Foundation. The foundation then gave the collection to the Van Gogh Museum on permanent loan. The museum augmented it with works acquired through purchase and donations. The museum also exhibits works by his contemporaries, including Paul Gauguin, Mary Cassatt and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
Vincent van Gogh’s Methods
- Van Gogh applied paint thickly to the canvas, leaving visible brush strokes. This technique, known as impasto, gives his work physical depth and a special sense of vibration.
- Rather than blending paint smoothly, his strokes follow, twist and swirl the contours of the subject. This adds rhythmic movement and intense energy to his canvases.
- He used striking and uncommon colours to convey specific moods and emotions. He famously placed complementary colours (such as orange and blue) side by side to make the canvas convulse visually.
- Van Gogh sometimes used dark and heavy outlines. This accentuated shapes, separated colours and gave his subjects a distinct, contoured look.
- He repeatedly distorted reality, portraying landscapes and objects from unusual angles and gave them a dreamlike quality.
Sunflowers 1889

In August 1888 Van Gogh painted a bouquet of sunflowers in a vase and created a masterpiece. With just three shades of yellow, he achieved a colour harmony that stood out. Proud of his work, he declared himself a painter of sunflowers.
The Potato Eaters 1885

According to Van Gogh, a life-like peasant painting should smell of bacon, smoke and hot potatoes. Steam rises from the plate of potatoes. He wanted to portray the poor peasants in their roughness and gave them coarse features and calloused hands. He chose a dark ash colour which matched the dusty field. Van Gogh was pleased with the final result.
The Harvest 1888

The scorched air of the harvesting time is palpable in the landscape around Arles, France. The combination of yellow and blue imparts the beauty of the landscape. Van Gogh was pleased with the outcome. He felt that it surpassed all his other works in this period.
Seascape near Les-Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer 1888

Vincent van Gogh painted Seascape near Les Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer in 1888 on a short visit to a Mediterranean fishing village in the south of France. The windswept canvas is famous for its vivid blue, green and yellow strokes. It features grains of sand embedded directly into the paint.
The View of the Sea at Scheveningen 1882

View of the Sea at Scheveningen is a stormy, realistic 1882 landscape by Vincent van Gogh. Painted during his time in The Hague, it is historically significant as one of his very first attempts at oil painting.
The painting was stolen from Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in 2002. The museum miraculously recovered it in 2016 and put it through extensive conservation treatment.
Glass with Yellow Roses 1886

Vincent van Gogh conceived this painting in Paris in July 1886. Painted with oil on cardboard, this piece exhibits his experimentation with vivid floral colours against a dark, contrasting background. The painting captures bright yellow blooms in a glass vessel.
Garden with Courting Couples, Square Saint-Pierre 1887

Amorous couples stroll among the young chestnut trees or sit along the winding paths. He succeeded in rendering the picture of a dazzling spring day. He too wished to have a wife and family but had the most unlikely love stories.
Value of Van Gogh Paintings
- Orchard with Cypresses (1888): Sold for $117.2 million at Christie’s in 2022, making it the most expensive Van Gogh sold to date.
- Portrait of Dr Paul Gachet (1890): Sold for $83 million in 1990. Adjusted for inflation, this would be over $200 million today, holding the record for the highest real-term value.
- Labourer in a Field (1889): Sold for $81.3 million at Christie’s in 2017.
- Self-portrait without a Beard (1889): Auctioned for $72 million in 1998, which is estimated to be valued between $140–$180 million today.
Getting There
A tram ride (17 min) will take you from Amsterdam Centraal station to Museumplein. From the tram stop, it is a short walk of 2 min.
A single GVB tram ride from Amsterdam Centraal to Museumplein costs €1.60 to €3.40. The most cost-effective way is to tap in and out with a contactless bank card. It charges a flat base fee plus distance, typically costing €1.60 for this route.
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