Vincent van Gogh biography!
March 6, 2011 0 Comments
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.
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 Southeby'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).
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.
In 1880, Vincent van Gogh 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 Vicent and Anton soon split over divergence of artistic views, influences of the Hague School of painting would remain in Vincents 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-Francois 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.
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 his Professor. Van Gogh did however get in
touch with Japanese art during this period, which he started to
collect eagerly. He admired its bright colors, 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 Vincent van Gogh went to Paris, where he moved in
with his brother Theo; they shared a house on Montmartre. Here he
met the painters met Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Bernard, Henri
de Toulouse-Lautrec and Paul Gauguin. He discovered impressionism
and liked its use of light and color, 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.
In 1888, when city life and living with his brothers proved too
much, Van Gogh left Paris and went to Arles, Bouches-du-Rh, 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.
Vincent
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-Rh, 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 van Gogh 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 organized soon: Paris 1901,
Amsterdam 1905, Cologne 1912, New York 1913 and Berlin
1914.
Vincent van Gogh's mother threw away quite a number of his paintings during Vincent's life and even after his death. But she would live long enough to see her son become a world famous painter.

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