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Van Gogh Vincent | 1853-1890 | [ Back | Photos ]
Vincent van Gogh (March 30, 1853
- July 29, 1890) is generally considered
the greatest Dutch painter after Rembrandt,
though he had little success during
his lifetime. Van Gogh produced all
of his work (some 900 paintings and
1100 drawings) during a period of
only 10 years before he succumbed
to mental illness (possibly bipolar
disorder) and committed suicide. His
fame grew rapidly after his death
especially following a showing of
71 of van Gogh's paintings in Paris
on March 17, 1901 (11 years after
his death).
(Properly the name rhymes with loch,
but it is also pronounced 'goph',
'go' and 'goe'.)
Van Gogh's influence on expressionism,
fauvism and early abstraction was
enormous, and can be seen in many
other aspects of 20th-century art.
The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam is
dedicated to Van Gogh's work and that
of his contemporaries. The Kröller-Müller
Museum in Otterlo (also in The Netherlands),
has a considerable collection of Vincent
van Gogh paintings as well.
Several paintings by Van Gogh rank
among the most expensive paintings
in the world. On March 30, 1987 Van
Gogh's painting Irises was sold for
a record $53.9 million at Sotheby's,
New York. On May 15, 1990 his Portrait
of Doctor Gachet was sold for $82.5
million at Christie's, thus establishing
a new price record (see also List
of most expensive paintings).
Life and Work
Vincent was born in Zundert, Netherlands;
his father was a Protestant minister,
a profession that Vincent found appealing
and to which he would be drawn to
a certain extent later in his life.
His sister described him as a serious
and introspective child.
At age 16 Vincent started to work
for the art dealer Goupil & Co.
in The Hague. His brother Theo, four
years his junior, with whom Vincent
cherished a life long friendship,
would join the company later. This
friendship is amply documented in
a vast amount of letters they sent
each other. These letters have been
preserved and were published in 1914.
They provide a lot of insight into
the life of the painter, and show
him to be a talented writer with a
keen mind. Theo would support Vincent
financially throughout his life.
In 1873, his firm transferred him
to London, then to Paris. He became
increasingly interested in religion;
in 1876 Goupil dismissed him for lack
of motivation. He became a teaching
assistant in Ramsgate near London,
then returned to Amsterdam to study
theology in 1877.
After dropping out in 1878, he became
a lay preacher in Belgium in a poor
mining region known as the Borinage.
He even preached down in the mines
and was extremely concerned with the
lot of the workers. He was dismissed
after 6 months and continued without
pay. During this period he started
to produce charcoal sketches.
In 1880, Vincent followed the suggestion
of his brother Theo and took up painting
in earnest. For a brief period Vincent
took painting lessons from Anton Mauve
at The Hague. Although Vincent and
Anton soon split over divergence of
artistic views, influences of the
Hague School of painting would remain
in Vincent's work, notably in the
way he played with light and in the
looseness of his brush strokes. However
his usage of colours, favouring dark
tones, set him apart from his teacher.
In 1881 he declared his love to his
widowed cousin Kee Vos, who rejected
him. Later he would move in with the
prostitute Sien Hoornik and her children
and considered marrying her; his father
was strictly against this relationship
and even his brother Theo advised
against it. They later separated.
Impressed and influenced by Jean-François
Millet, van Gogh focussed on painting
peasants and rural scenes. He moved
to the Dutch province Drenthe, later
to Nuenen, North Brabant, also in
The Netherlands. Here he painted in
1885 The Potato Eaters (Dutch Aardappeleters,
now in The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam).
In the winter of 1885-1886 Van Gogh
attended the art academy of Antwerp,
Belgium. This proved a disappointment
as he was dismissed after a few months
by Professor Eugène Siberdt.
Van Gogh did however get in touch
with Japanese art during this period,
which he started to collect eagerly.
He admired its bright colours, use
of canvas space and the role lines
played in the picture. These impressions
would influence him strongly. Van
Gogh made some painting in Japanese
style. Also some of the portraits
he painted are set against a background
which shows Japanese art.
In spring 1886 Van Gogh went to Paris,
where he moved in with his brother
Theo; they shared a house on Montmartre.
Here he met the painters Edgar Degas,
Camille Pissarro, Emile Bernard, Henri
de Toulouse-Lautrec and Paul Gauguin.
He discoverd impressionism and liked
its use of light and colour, more
than its lack of social engagement
(as he saw it). Especially the technique
known as pointillism (where many small
dots are applied to the canvas that
blend into rich colors only in the
eye of the beholder, seeing it from
a distance) made its mark on Van Goghs
own style. It should be noted that
Van Gogh is regarded as a post-impressionist,
rather than an impressionist. Van
Gogh also used complementary colors,
especially blue and orange, in close
proximity in order to enhance the
brilliance of each (see color).
In 1888, when city life and living
with his brothers proved too much,
Van Gogh left Paris and went to Arles,
Bouches-du-Rhône, France. He
was impressed with the local landscape
and hoped to found an art colony.
He decorated a "yellow house"
and created a celebrated series of
yellow sunflower paintings for this
purpose. Only Paul Gauguin, whose
simplified colour schemes and forms
(known as synthetism) attracted van
Gogh, followed his invitation. The
admiration was mutual, and Gauguin
painted van Gogh painting sunflowers.
However their encounter ended in a
quarrel. Van Gogh suffered a mental
breakdown and cut off part of his
left ear, which he gave to a startled
prostitute friend. Gauguin left in
December 1888.
The only painting he sold during
his lifetime, The Red Vineyard, was
created in 1888. It is now on display
in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, Russia.
Van Gogh now exchanged painting dots
for small stripes. He suffered from
depression, and in 1889 on his own
request Van Gogh was admitted to the
psychiatric center at Monastery Saint-Paul
de Mausole in Saint Remy de Provence,
Bouches-du-Rhône, France. During
his stay here the clinic and its garden
became his main subject. Pencil strokes
changed again, now into spiral curves.
In May 1890 Vincent left the clinic
and went to the physician Paul Gachet,
in Auvers-sur-Oise near Paris, where
he was closer to his brother Theo,
who had recently married. Gachet had
been recommended to him by Pissarro;
he had treated several artists before.
Here van Gogh created his only etching:
a portrait of the melancholic doctor
Gachet. His depression aggravated.
On July 27 of the same year, at the
age of 37, after a fit of painting
activity, van Gogh shot himself in
the chest. He died two days later,
with Theo at his side, who reported
his last words as "La tristesse
durera toujours" (French: "The
sadness will last forever").
He was buried at the cemetery of Auvers-sur-Oise;
Theo unable to come to terms with
his brother's death died 6 months
later and was buried next to him.
It would not take long before his
fame grew higher and higher. Large
exhibitions were organised soon: Paris
1901, Amsterdam 1905, Cologne 1912,
New York 1913 and Berlin 1914.
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