VINCENT VAN GOGH
Few artists command such fervent devotion amongst art lovers and
such high prices in the salerooms of the art world. Love him or
hate him, Vincent van Gogh is one of a handful of artists who is
now a cultural event.
Stuart Morris's study concentrates on the paintings first, and
employs van Gogh's eloquent letters as an aesthetic reference
point. Much of the book is concerned with metacriticism - the way
van Gogh has been critically received over the years.
Vincent van Gogh is one of the most celebrated of painters. It's
a bit of a mystery. The mystery (or irony) is that his paintings
have commanded the highest prices in the auction rooms of the
contemporary art world (88 million dollars, 53 million dollars, and
so on), yet he only managed to sell one painting during his
lifetime, and he lived in poverty (with financial support from his
brother Theo).
Why is Vincent van Gogh so popular? His legend has developed
relatively rapidly. His art is loved by the critics and public. The
crazy prices paid for single oil paintings are the manifestations
of the fervour that van Gogh seems to generate. He is one of the
handful of painters who cause great excitement every time
exhibitions of his work are put on. One thinks also of Claude
Monet, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonaroti and Pablo Picasso.
These are artists that the public go mad for, so that when they are
exhibited, there are huge queues trailing around the block.
The 1990 centenary celebrations of 'poor Vincent' showed how
much he is exalted. There were films about him, discussions and
conferences, TV documentaries, magazine articles, reviews, letters,
and much merchandize was sold, to the great glee of the
manufacturers: posters, tea towels, calendars, mugs, souvenirs of
all kinds. What would the dishevelled, obsessive man who painted
those small canvases in the years up to 1890 in Southern France
make of the amazing fuss that now surrounds his work? What would
van Gogh think of just one of his paintings being bought for 88
million dollars? It is a huge sum even in today's expensive world.
You could build a hospital or two with the money. Imagine it Did
Vincent know that when he painted those blue irises on that small,
standard-size canvas, that it would one day be 'worth' millions of
dollars?
I shall count myself very happy if I can manage to work enough
to earn my living, for it worries me a lot when I think that I have
done so many pictures and drawings without ever selling one.
Like the workers he depicted in numerous images, Vincent van
Gogh himself worked very hard to improve his art. With a dogged
determination van Gogh copied the Old Masters, as well as Japanese
prints. His determined self-education and self-improvement paid
off, resulting in more than 800 paintings in about 8 years. The
years of van Gogh's art are relatively few - nearly all of the
important works were made in the decade 1880-90. Hence his
paintings are credited in art history books with the month and
sometimes the day as well as the year of production. For most
artists, 1889 would suffice. For van Gogh, the credit is October
1889. Producing 800 paintings in 8 years is an average of a hundred
per year, or one every three and a half days. More likely, van Gogh
would have worked on a number at the same time, or within a short
space of time.
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