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| Ghost of Honor
Vincent van Gogh
Birth Year : 1853
Death Year : 1890
Country : Netherlands
Vincent
van Gogh, for whom color was the chief symbol of expression, was
born in Groot-Zundert, Holland. The son of a pastor, brought up
in a religious and cultured atmosphere, Vincent was highly emotional
and lacked self-confidence. Between 1860 and 1880, when he finally
decided to become an artist, van Gogh had had two unsuitable and
unhappy romances and had worked unsuccessfully as a clerk in a bookstore,
an art salesman, and a preacher in the Borinage (a dreary mining
district in Belgium), where he was dismissed for overzealousness.
He remained in Belgium to study art, determined to give happiness
by creating beauty. The works of his early Dutch period are somber-toned,
sharply lit, genre paintings of which the most famous is "The
Potato Eaters" (1885). In that year van Gogh went to Antwerp
where he discovered the works of Rubens and purchased many Japanese
prints.
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. In a fit of epilepsy,
van Gogh pursued his friend with an open razor, was stopped by Gauguin,
but ended up cutting a portion of his 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.
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