Artist of the week "Vincent van Gogh"

**Birth Year : 1853
Death Year : 1890
Country : Netherlands **

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).

Life and Work

Vincent van Gogh, for whom color was the chief symbol of expression, was born in Groot-Zundert, Holland. The 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 four years younger brother Theo, 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 layman 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.
**
The productive decade**

His artistic career was extremely short, lasting only the 10 years from 1880 to 1890. During the first four years of this period, while acquiring technical proficiency, he confined himself almost entirely to drawings and watercolours. First, he went to study drawing at the Brussels Academy; in 1881 he moved to his father’s parsonage at Etten, Neth., and began to work from nature.

Van Gogh worked hard and methodically but soon perceived the difficulty of self-training and the need to seek the guidance of more experienced artists. Late in 1881 he settled at The Hague to work with a Dutch landscape painter, Anton Mauve. He visited museums and met with other painters. Van Gogh thus extended his technical knowledge and experimented with oil paint in the summer of **1882. **

In 1883 the urge to be “alone with nature” and with peasants took him to Drenthe, an isolated part of the northern Netherlands frequented by Mauve and other Dutch artists, where he spent three months before returning home, which was then at Nuenen, another village in the Brabant. He remained at Nuenen during most of 1884 and 1885, and during these years his art grew bolder and more assured. He painted three types of subjects—still life, landscape, and figure—all interrelated by their reference to the daily life of peasants, to the hardships they endured, and to the countryside they cultivated. Émile Zola](http://www.biography.com/search/article.do?id=37621)'s Germinal (1885), a novel about the coal-mining region of France, greatly impressed van Gogh, and sociological criticism is implicit in many of his pictures from this period—e.g., Weavers and The Potato Eaters. Eventually, however, he felt too isolated in Nuenen.

In 1886 he went to Paris to join his brother Théo, the manager of Goupil’s gallery. In Paris, van Gogh studied with Cormon, inevitably met Pissarro, Monet, and Gauguin, and began to lighten his very dark palette and to paint in the short brushstrokes of the Impressionists. His nervous temperament made him a difficult companion and night-long discussions combined with painting all day undermined his health. He decided to go south to Arles where he hoped his friends would join him and help found a school of art. Gauguin did join him but with disastrous results. Near the end of 1888, an incident led Gauguin to ultimately leave Arles. Van Gogh pursued him with an open razor, was stopped by Gauguin, but ended up cutting a portion of his own ear lobe off. Van Gogh then began to alternate between fits of madness and lucidity and was sent to the asylum in Saint-Remy for treatment.

In May of 1890, he seemed much better and went to live in Auvers-sur-Oise under the watchful eye of Dr. Gachet. Two months later he was dead, having shot himself “for the good of all.” During his brief career he had sold one painting. Van Gogh’s finest works were produced in less than three years in a technique that grew more and more impassioned in brushstroke, in symbolic and intense color, in surface tension, and in the movement and vibration of form and line. Van Gogh’s inimitable fusion of form and content is powerful; dramatic, lyrically rhythmic, imaginative, and emotional, for the artist was completely absorbed in the effort to explain either his struggle against madness or his comprehension of the spiritual essence of man and nature.

Vincent van Gogh died at the age of 37 bringing his career as a painter to an end, but beginning his legacy as the great painter of the future who inspired the world.


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**Famous Works:
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The Starry Night

Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh has risen to the peak of artistic achievements. Starry Night is one of the most well known images in modern culture as well as being one of the most replicated and sought after prints.

Portrait of Dr. Gachet

Paul-Ferdinand Gachet (July 30 1828 - January 9 1909) was a French Doctor who treated Vincent van Gogh’s mental illness during the last weeks of van Gogh’s life. Gachet was an artist and great supporter of the Impressionist movement. Dr. Gachet and Van Gogh enjoyed a dual relationship as doctor and patient and as friends.

**The Blooming Plum Tree **

This painting is from the Japonisme period that took place right after the opening of Japan. Van Gogh was fascinated by Japanese concepts of perception and depth in their paintings, and so would take prints like the one above by Hiroshige, repaint it, and then add his own border around it. This particular one has random kanji-esque characters to further give the painting a feeling of “japonesque.” Van Gogh did many of these, including more Hiroshige, in his day.****


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**Cafe Terrace at Night
**

Cafe Terrace at Night, also known as The Cafe Terrace on the Place du Forum, was done in Arles, France in September 1888. Today it has been carefully recreated detail by detail, color by color to near perfection. Depicting a cafe in Arles, then Cafe Terrace and today it is called Cafe Van Gogh. The style of the painting is unique to Van Gogh with warm colors and depth of perspective. This is the first example of Van Gogh using star filled backgrounds in his work.


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Please give us the link to explore further :sunnyboy:

re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

sources:

http://www.vincentvangoghart.net/

http://www.vangoghgallery.com/

http://www.vangoghgallery.com/misc/bio.html](http://www.vincentvangoghart.net/)

Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

very nice sharing simii :slight_smile: :k:

Re: Artist of the week "Vincent van Gogh"

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Re: Artist of the week "Vincent van Gogh"

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

Meri Marzi :mocking:

Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week "Vincent van Gogh"

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

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Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

**Vincent Van Gogh Famous Work

****A Wheatfield with Cypresses
**
This was painted in September 1889 on a canvas, with 51.5 x 65 cm dimension, when Van Gogh was in the St-Rémy mental asylum, near Arles, where he was a patient from May 1889 until May 1890. It is one of three almost identical versions of the compositions.

Still Life: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers (1888, Yellow)

Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh choose Sunflowers (original title, in French: Tournesols) as the subjects of two series of still life. The first series was done in Paris in 1887 gives the flowers laying on the ground. The later series, which this painting is part of, was painted in Arles a year later and shows bouquets of sunflowers in a vase.
Van Gogh considered the two series linked through his friend Paul Gauguin, who acquired two of the Paris versions. Around eight months later Van Gogh was hoping to welcome and impress Gauguin again with Sunflowers, this time as part of the painted decoration of the guestroom as he prepared it in his Yellow House where Gauguin was scheduled to stay in Arles.


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Re: Artist of the week "Vincent van Gogh"

Interesting

Re: Artist of the week “Vincent van Gogh”

:hat: