...unced by Johan de Meester, who turned to Jo van Gogh-Bonger for his information.See De Meester 1911, ...
...1914 Brieven aan zijn broeder, edited by Jo van Gogh-Bonger, thus clearly fell into the most fertile ...
On Jo’s contact with art dealers and exhibition organizers, see: Feilchenfeldt 1988, Account book 2...
...Gogh’s life and work, we now know that Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s introduction suffers from a considera...
...t an annotated work), but in some places Jo van Gogh-Bonger felt compelled to add a footnote, usually...
...g into print, but pure text editing too. Jo van Gogh-Bonger took full advantage of this ‘editorial ...
...s van Gogh was still alive: She wrote to Jo van Gogh-Bonger: ‘Will Vincent’s letters be in De Tel...
FR b2153, letter from Jo van Gogh-Bonger to Paul Gachet Jr, 27 February 1912. She, incidentally, saw ...
Given Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s ties to the Van Gogh family, such interventions are understandable (whic...
...a broad cross-section of the population. Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s choice of this publishing house was u...
Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s surviving correspondence with the publishers reveals that 2,100 copies were pr...
...4. Sales figures, contract, payments and Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s correspondence with De Wereldbiblioth...
Jo had agreed with Cassirer that the German edition should be published by 1 November 1912 at the lat...
Remarkably, Jo van Gogh-Bonger financed the publication herself. It was a considerable investment and...
...d in 1924, with a maximum of f 5,000 for Jo van Gogh-Bonger. The other conditions remained virtually ...
Letter from De Wereldbibliotheek to Jo van Gogh-Bonger, 24 February 1924.
...ation of these same letters.Briefe 1914. Jo van Gogh-Bonger owned the rights, and we can identify at ...
...ant conduit to the German art market for Jo van Gogh-Bonger, and he had sold a good many Van Goghs fr...
There is nothing in Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s account book about the money she received from Cassirer fo...