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Artist
painter Vincent van Gogh: post impressionist art
Artist
impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh, painting of
sunflowers, bedroom, cypress trees: letters to art dealer
and brother
"Though I am often in
the depths of misery, there is still calmness, pure harmony
and music inside me. I see paintings or drawings in the
poorest cottages, in the dirtiest corners. And my mind is
driven towards these things with an irresistible momentum." Vincent
van Gogh 21 July 1882
Artist
painter Vincent van Gogh, painting of sunflowers, bedroom &
cypress trees
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Techie Painting Terms
Chiaroscuro, Impasto, Glaze,
Scumble, Under painting, etc. |
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Saintes-Maries trip of 1888 van Gogh
goes painting for 3 days. |
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Starry Night An extremely turbulent painting,
this is van Gogh moving away from Impressionism and into
Expressionism, Plus Don McLean's words from the
song Vincent. |
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Wheatfield's Vincent at his most colourful and
sorrowful. |
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Vincent' Chair Van Gogh and Gauguin's chairs at
Arles, with focus on detail. |
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Painting demonstration
given by artist Douglas Carpenter. |
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Impressionist
The
artist:- Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Delacroix, Gauguin |
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Vincent van Gogh Book Shop
Buy books about this
great artist at my book shop. It cost you no more than
buying direct from Amazon and helps support this site
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A Letter
To Vincent van Gogh's Brother Theo, States:
"I should not be
surprised if the Impressionists soon find fault with my way
of painting, for it has been fertilized by the ideas of
artist Delacroix rather than by theirs. Because, instead of
trying to reproduce exactly what I have before my eyes, I
use colour more arbitrarily so as to express myself
forcibly."
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Artist impressionist
painter Vincent van Gogh, painting of sunflowers, bedroom,
cypress trees: letters to art dealer and brother
| Vincent Van
Gogh was born in Groot-Zundert, Netherlands, son of a
small town preacher. He began his working life employed
by Groupil & Cie, an international art dealer, but then
left to consider a career with the church as his
religious zeal grew. In 1879, having grown disenchanted
with both formal religious education and the evangelist
path, he decided to become an arist. Over the course of
the next ten years, before he took his own life, he
produced an enormous body of work. While it is not quite
true that he never sold a piece of art, during his
lifetime his primary supporters were his brother Theo
and other artists. Van Gogh also relied on Theo for
financial support. While some art historians question
how much of Van Gogh current popularity is due to
romantic mythology around the "insane genius", his work
is unquestionably powerful and unique. |
His use of paint was
extremely physical (it is a shame one cannot get a sense
of the thick, powerful, green swirls around the head in
the above self-portrait)-- a benefit of never having
learned painting, he wrote his brother in 1882 --
and his artistic style is as intense and intelligent as
his writings. Among other painters, he greatly respected
Millet, Delacroix, and Daumier.Excerpts from Vincent
Van Gogh's Letters
Van
Gogh to his brother Theo, 21 July 1882
"Art is jealous, she doesn't like taking second place
an indisposition. Hence I shall humor her. ... What I
want and have as my aim is infernally difficult to
achieve, and yet I don't think I am raising my sights to
high. I want to do drawings that touch some people."
Van
Gogh to Theo, 20 August 1882
"What I find such a pleasant surprise about painting
is that you can, with the same effect you put into a
drawing, take something home with you that conveys the
impression much better and is much more pleasing to look
at. And at the same time more accurate, too. In a word,
it is more rewarding than drawing. But it is absolutely
essential to be able to draw the proportions correctly
and to position the objects fairly confidently before
you start. If you make a mistake here, it will all come
to nothing."
Van
Gogh to Theo, 3 September 1882
"I said to myself while I was doing it: don't let me
leave before there is something of the autumnal evening
in it, something mysterious, something important.
However -- because this effect doesn't last -- I had to
paint quickly, putting the figures in all at once, with
a few forceful strokes of a firm brush. It had struck me
how firmly the saplings were planted in the ground -- I
started on them with the brush, but because the ground
was already impasted, brush strokes simply vanished into
it. Then I squeezed roots and trunks in from the tube
and modelled them a little with the brush.
Well, they are in there now,
springing out of it, standing strongly rooted in it.
In a way I am glad that I never
learned painting. In all probability I would then
have learned to ignore such effects as this. Now I can
say to myself, this is just what I want. If it is
impossible, it is impossible, but I'm going to try it
even though I don't know how it ought to be done."
Van
Gogh to Theo, 22 October 1882
[editor's note: Van Gogh was writing of
figures versus landscape, looking at a Daumier drawing]
"What impressed me so much at the time was something
so stout and manly in Daumier's conception, something
that made me think it must be good to think and to feel
like that and to overlook or ignore a multitude of
things and to concentrate on what makes us sit up and
think and what touches us as human beings more directly
and personally than meadows or clouds."
"What is drawing? How does one come to it? It is
working through an invisible iron wall that seems to
stand between what one feels and what one can
do. How is one to get through that wall -- since
pounding at it is of no use? In my opinion one has to
undermine that wall, filing through it steadily and
patiently."
Van
Gogh to Anton van Rappard, March 1884
"I certainly forsee that as I gain more of what I
shall call expressive force, people will say not
less but even more than they do now that I
have no technique." ... "Do you really think I
don't care about technique or that I don't try for it?
Oh, but I do, although only inasmuch as it allows me to
say what I want to say (and if I cannot do that yet, or
not yet perfectly, I am working hard to improve), but I
don't give a damn whether my language matches that of
the rhetoricians..."
Van
Gogh to Theo, October 1884
"You don't know how paralysing that is, that
stare of a blank canvas, which says to the painter:
you can't do a thing." ... "Many painters are
afraid in front of the blank canvas, but
the blank canvas is afraid of the real,
passionate painter who dares and who has broken the
spell of 'you can't' once and for all."
Van
Gogh to Theo, c. 30 April 1885
"When weavers weave that cloth which I think they
call cheviot, or those curious multicoloured Scottish
tartan fabrics, then they try, as you know, to get
strange broken colours and greys into the cheviot -- and
to get the most vivid colours to balance each other in
the multicoloured chequered cloth -- so that instead of
the fabric being a jumble, the effect produit
of the pattern looks harmonious from a distance.
A grey woven from red, blue,
yellow, off-white & black threads -- a blue broken by a
green and an orange, red or yellow thread -- are quite
unlike plain colours, that is, they are more
vibrant, and primary colours seem hard, cold
and lifeless beside them.
Yet the weaver, or rather the
designer, of the pattern or the colour combination does
not always find it easy to make an exact estimate of the
number of threads and their direction -- no more than it
is easy to weave brush strokes into a harmonious whole."
Van
Gogh to Theo, July 1885
"All academic figures are put together in the same
way, and, let us admit, 'on ne peut mieux' -- impeccably
-- faultlessly. You will have gathered what I
am driving at -- they do not lead us to any new
discoveries."
"... a Parisian who has
learned his drawing at the academy, will always convey
the limbs and the structure of the body in the ame way
-- sometimes charming, accurate in proportion and
anatomical detail. But when Israëls, or say, Daumier or
Lhermitte, draw a figure, one gets much more of a sense
of the shape of the body, and yet -- and that's
the very reason I'm pleased to include Daumier - the
proportions will sometimes be almost arbitrary, the
anatomy and structure often anything but correct in
the eyes of the academicians. But it will live.
And Delacroix too, in particular."
"... if one were to photograph
a digger, he would certainly not be digging
then. ... I long most of all to learn how to produce
those very inaccuracies, those very aberrations,
reworkings, transformations of reality, as may turn it
into, well -- a lie if you like -- but truer than the
literal truth."
Van
Gogh to Theo, 3 September 1888
"...suffering as I am, I cannot do without something
greater than myself, something which is my life -- the
power to create.
And if, deprived of the physical
power, one tries to create thoughts instead of children,
one is still very much part of humanity. And in my
pictures I want to say something consoling, as music
does. I want to paint men and women with a touch of the
eternal, whose symbol was once the halo, which we try to
convey by the very radiance and vibrancy of our
colouring." |
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