vincent or why we pick literature to pieces. all images found at m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

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Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces

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Page 1: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Vincent

Or why we pick literature to pieces

Page 2: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

All images found athttp://www.vangoghmuseum.co

m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Page 3: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Failures

Most casual art lovers see Van Gogh as a troubled, but successful artist. This is far from the actual truth of his turbulent life, which was fraught with failure in every occupational pursuit he attempted including painting, and was marked by intermittent episodes of depression, violence and acting out behaviors.

Self-portrait

Page 4: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Theo Van Gogh

Thanks to the preservation of 1000's of letters Van Gogh had written to friends and family, especially to his brother Theo, we have a nearly complete understanding of his feelings, experiences, and views on every aspect of his life.

Page 5: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Career Van Gogh’s career in

art, 10 years, is one of the briefest in art history.

Although 1700 of his works survived, he sold only 1 painting during his lifetime.• Sold for $80, four

months before his death

The Red Vineyard

Page 6: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Childhood

A look into his childhood will give us an understanding of Van Gogh's creative expression, as well as an understanding of the origins of Expressionism.

13 Years Old

Page 7: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Childhood Charming, but stubborn and hot-tempered Sent away to boarding school at the age of

12 Left school at 16 Attempted to become a teacher and a

preacher, worked in a bookstore, and sold art

Began painting after 9 month withdrawal

Page 8: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Childhood Vincent's sister, Elizabeth

Van Gogh, described his demeanor as a child. He was "intensely serious and uncommunicative, and walked around clumsily and in a daze, with his head hung low." She continued by saying, "Not only were his little sisters and brothers (he was the oldest of 8) like strangers to him, but he was a stranger to himself." 18 years old

Page 9: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Birth date Vincent van Gogh was born in Groot Zundert, The

Netherlands on 30 March 1853. Van Gogh's birth came one year to the day after

his mother gave birth to a first, stillborn child--also named Vincent.

There has been much speculation about Vincent van Gogh suffering later psychological trauma as a result of being a "replacement child" and having a deceased brother with the same name and same birth date. This theory remains unsubstantiated, however, and there is no actual historical evidence to support it.

Page 10: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Vincent’s Parents

Van Gogh was the son of Theodorus van Gogh (1822-85), a pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church, and Anna Cornelia Carbentus (1819-1907).

Page 11: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Van Gogh cuts off own ear!

Van Gogh had a violent argument with fellow painter and housemate Gauguin

He gave it to a local prostitute telling her, “Keep this object as a treasure.”

Page 12: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Starry Night June, 1889 Starry Night was

painted while Vincent was in the asylum at Saint-Rémy and his behaviour was very erratic at the time, due to the severity of his attacks.

Most famous painting

Page 13: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Portrait

Toulouse-Latrec was influenced by Van Gogh’s power and intensity and his use of blue and gray colors.

Page 14: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Harvest

June 1888 Tranquil painting

emphasizing lush green and yellow fields offset by violet shadows on the sides of wagons, houses and hillsides.

Page 15: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Landscape with Snow

February, 1888 Continues Van Gogh’s

love of the landscape and use of Expressionism

Page 16: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

On the Threshold of Eternity

April-May, 1890 Saint-Rémy Hospital Reflects Vincent’s

own condition - his experience of loneliness that lead him to complete despair

Page 17: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Sunflowers

August, 1888

Painted a series of these flowers to decorate his hospital room

Notice his signature on the vase - just “Vincent”

Page 18: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Plains Near Auvers

July, 1890

Emphasizes extreme detail, with tall grass in the foreground created by long slashes of paint

Shows Van Gogh’s mastery of the landscape

Page 19: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Last Self-portrait

September, 1889 This portrait shows

Vincent as he saw himself - • a tortured soul,

battering desperately against the terrors which surrounded him

Page 20: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Sower

June, 1888 First work in a series

showing the connection between the peasant and the cycle of life

Page 21: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Head of a Peasant

March, 1885 Van Gogh attempted

to show the brutal life of the peasant

Van Gogh identified with the poor and unrecognized levels of society

Page 22: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Portrait of Patience Escalier

August, 1888 Peasant farmer Depicts the sturdy

qualities associated with the peasant’s life

Page 23: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Cafe Terrace at Night September, 1888 “It amuses me

enormously to paint the night right on the spot. They used to draw and paint the picture in the daytime after the rough sketch. But I find satisfaction in painting things immediately.”

Page 24: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Night Cafe September, 1888 “I have tried to

express the terrible passions of humanity by means of red and green.”

“I have tried to express the idea that the cafe is a place where one can ruin oneself, go mad or commit a crime.”

Page 25: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Corridor of Saint-Paul Asylum October, 1889 Hospital he stayed in

after he cut off his ear No exact diagnosis of

Vincent’s ailment was made

Contemporary doctors believed he was epileptic or manic-depressive

Page 26: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Wheat Field with Crows July, 1890 One of his last 3

paintings On Sunday, July 27,

1890, Vincent killed himself

Psychologists believe this painting was a signal

Page 27: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Portrait of Doctor Gachet

June, 1890 One of Vincent’s few

friends Vincent said of Dr.

Gachet, “He certainly appears as ill and confused as I am.”

Sold in 1990 for $82.5 million

Page 28: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Potato Eaters

April, 1885 Attempt to depict

harsh living conditions of the peasants

Painted early in his career he uses the Dutch style

Page 29: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

The Drinkers

February, 1890 Depicts the four ages

of man drinking around a table

Caricature of men drinking themselves to death

Page 30: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Roses and Beetle

April-May, 1890 Van Gogh often chose

still life subject matter to decorate his hospital rooms during his several stays for mental breakdowns

Page 31: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Bedroom at Arles Early September, 1889 “Color is everything;

giving by its simplification a grander style to things, is to be suggestive here of rest and sleep in general

Reflects yearning for companionship

Page 32: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Paul Gauguin’s Armchair

December 1888 Ornately carved, with

aggressive arms and legs

Depicts a restless personality bathed in artificial light

Page 33: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

Vincent’s Chair with Pipe

December, 1888 Simple workmanship

and rough unlit with tobacco pouch speak of the artist’s desolation

Another self-portrait

Page 34: Vincent Or why we pick literature to pieces. All images found at  m/bisrd/top-1-2.html

“He was an honest man and a great artist. He had only two aims, mankind and art. Art he loved above everything, and it will make him live.”

-Dr. Gachet(At Van Gogh’s funeral)