Vincent Van Gogh's Paintbrush

Origin
Vncent Van Gogh was a Dutch painter in the 1800s who, with his far-flinging influence, has become a well-known and well-respected artist even into the twenty-first century. Van Gogh was especially famous for his use of color, emotional invocation, and rough painting style to create such well-known masterpieces such as The Starry Night, Still Life: Vase with Twelve 'Sunflowers, and Painter on the Road to Tarscon. This was a complete one-eighty from his earlier works, which used more somber colors and controlled painting style, like The 'Potato Eaters and Skull of a Skeleton with Burning Cigarette, a switch which occurred when he moved to the South of France in 1888 and was inspired by the natural light on the terrain.

This artifact inspired the animated Disney version of Alice in Wonderland.

Effects
This paintbrush, which accompanied him during this time, can paint onto reality. When handled as if using a normal paintbrush and swished around on a surface, the object becomes more beautiful and appealing to people. However, the object slowly starts to begin looking like something straight out of a Van Gogh painting, becoming bright and textured over time, and eventually turns into paint.