After doing some research about "The Night Cafe", I found out that the painting was painted in September 1888 while Van Gogh was living in Arles. Van Gogh moved to a room at Cafe de la Gare, where he found his inspiration for this painting. Prior to painting "The Night Cafe", Van Gogh was planning to paint the room and the people who he called "the night prowlers." In the painting itself there are five men, four of which are siting and the other one (the one in the white suit) is standing by the green billiard table which Van Gogh depicted as the cafe owner, but if you look closely you'll notice that there is one woman there, sitting in the far back, making it a total of six figures in the painting. As said in the excerpt, there are clashes
“There are no ghosts in the paintings of Van Gogh, no visions, no hallucinations. This is the torrid truth of the sun at two o’clock in the afternoon.” This quote that Antonin Artraud, stated from, Van Gogh, the Man Suicided by Society, explains the way in which Van Gogh approached his artwork. He believed in the dry truth and as a result his work was remarkably straightforward in the messages that he portrayed. While visiting Paris, France this past April, I was fortunate enough to have visited Musée d’Orsay, a museum that contains mostly French art from 1848-1914 and houses a large collection of impressionist and post-impressionist masterpieces and 19th century works from the Louvre [The Oxford Companion to Western Art]. I was also
Throughout the story Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Holden Caufield consistently expresses opposition to school. No matter how many schools he attends, he always flunks out. Holden seems to express a lack of interest in most of the subjects that he is being forced to take. None of these classes had anything to do with what Holden wants to do with his life. Likewise, they do not teach him the important life skills he needs to live a long and happy life. However, there is another option: vocational schools. These are schools that allow students to pursue a hands-on career that does not require a traditional academic bachelor's degree. How would a vocational school and career have improved Holden’s
The flow of the white brushstrokes in the sky seems to give the painting its feel of
The Starry Night, Sunflowers, and Wheatfield with Cypresses. These paintings were all created by someone who would leave a never ending legacy in the art world. A man who only had one ear, a man who was an outcast and eventually shunned by his family, a man who suffered with inner demons which later was known to be Temporal Lobe Epilepsy. This is the legacy of Vincent Van Gogh.
When having to choose two works of art to compare and analyze, it had occurred to me that one of my all time favorite artist has always been Vincent Van Gogh. After searching through countless of Van Gogh’s magnificent works of art, I knew I wanted to analyze ‘Houses in Auvers’. Once I chose my first painting, the second piece fell right into place. Since Van Gogh was a painter in the post impressionist movement, deciding to choose another painter from that movement worked out well. I chose, ‘Auvers, Panoramic View’, painted by Paul Cezanne. A majority of people admiring these paintings would realize at least two elements: houses, and the beauty. Although, looking beyond the beauty of the town, there are many more comparisons.
Vincent Van Gogh was born on March, 30 1853 in the town of Zundert in the Netherlands. He died at the age of thirty-seven on July 20, 1890 in Auvers-sur-Oise, France. Van Gogh primarily worked in oil paints on canvas or board. Some of his works include, The Starry Night, Irises, and the Night Cafe. He used oil paints as his main media. The art he created was primarily expressionistic and impressionistic. Expressionism is a unique type of painting, music, or theatrics in which the artist tries to express emotional experience rather than impressions of the external world. Impressionism is a style in painting starting in France in the 1860s, distinguished by a concern with depicting the visual impression of the moment, most likely in terms
Van Gogh is one of the few artists that explored Japanese art. When he moved to Paris in 1886 he was first introduced to impressionism. He also began to explore Japonism during this time. He admired the art’s bold designs, intense colors, and also the flat areas that consisted of pure color. Van Gogh also respected the art’s elegant and simple lines (Van Gogh Gallery: Japonisme 1).
Wheatfield with Crows is a 50.2 cm x 103 cm oil painting that was painted by Vincent van Gogh that was made in July 1890, in the last weeks of van Gogh’s life. This piece of art was created in Auvers, France but is currently housed in The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam under museum number F779 in the Van Gogh Museum collection. This piece of art work by Van Gogh is frequently debated about due to the fact that it may be one of his lasts works and may symbolize more than just and empty wheat field with crows, many believe that it was hint of his suicide. I was attracted to this piece of work because of the vibrant colors that he used to create this menacing depiction of an endless wheat field.
Vincent Van Gogh is one of the most recognized artists in the world. Van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853 in Groot-Zundert, Netherlands. Van Gogh was born into a family of six children in which his father was a pastor and his mother was an artist. He was named after his stillborn brother who died exactly one year before he was born.
I can relate this theory with Van Gogh because Van Gogh Archive this theory after he died only. He was then only became famous after his sister-in-law published all his painting. Maslow wrote, “A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write . . . to be ultimately at peace” (Schultz & Schultz, 2005, p. 315). If Van Gogh was alive he would have felt the moment and feeling of this memories of being famous. Van Gogh did not archive this theory when he was alive only after he was died.
!” In many cases individual artists make their own artwork. Michaelangelo Buonarroti did most of the painting. Vincent van Gogh painted all his own paintings, because as he wrote to his brother Teo, he valued the act of creation more than life itself. Eva Hesse made seventy sculptures during the few years of her life, even though she is very ill much of the time. She was driven to create work that seemed off balanced and expressed life’s absurdity and fundamental strangeness. Pieces lean against walls, spread across the floor, or hang on ceilings often made from materials that seem fragile or barely
1888- Vincent moves to Arles,France, to create an art school. Van Gogh paints the famous sunflower painting and starts suffering from mental problems. Van Gogh cuts off a portion of his ear and commits himself to a mental asylum in Saint Rémy.
Bedroom in Arles, an oil painting executed by Vincent van Gogh, is currently exhibited in the Art Institute of Chicago (version 1889). A medium-size painting full of transitions of colors and angles, The Bedroom showcases van Gogh’s residence in Arles, Bouches-du-Rhône, France, where he started extensive cooperation with Paul Gauguin. Although not a realistic reflection of the place he lived, The Bedroom masterfully integrates effects of colors, composition, perspective, and size to convey both a sense of calmness and a taste of excitement--intimacy and vitality.
Vincent Willem Van Gogh was born in 1853. Vincent had five siblings: two brothers, Theodorus (Theo), Cornelius Vincent; and three sisters, Anna Cornelia, Elisabeth Huberta, and Willemina (Wil) Jacoba. Theo was Vincent’s favorite family member and his closest friend. Wil was his favorite sister albite the age gap and had psychological disorders, like Vincent. Vincent was a solemn boy who favored privacy to the company of family and friends. He loved all types of nature but favored flower, bugs, and birds. He was a good student but, according to his sister, his choice of fashion, eating habits, and unsociable nature made him appear abnormal to others from a young age. In 1869 Vincent was sent to The Hague to work as a junior clerk in the art firm of Goupil and Company, a firm that dealt in art, photographic prints, and imitations of famous pieces. Vincent worked in the art trade for six and a half years. It seemed that he enjoyed the work and prospered in the art business, in the beginning at least. Vincent allowed his job, as most other things in his life, to engross him fully, only to abandon it suddenly in despair, frustration, and dejection. Soon afterward, in 1873, Vincent was transferred to London on a promotion, stopping in Paris to visit the art museums there, and Theo took his his position in The Hague offices of Goupil.
In the later part of the 19th Century, as a result of the Industrial Revolution, the population of cities began to expand exponentially, bringing major changes to society. The ability to gain steady employment and even learn a trade, brought the rural population from the farms and fields into the congestion of crowded cities. The resources needed for these industries also became a growing operation for towns, which focused on gathering and mining the natural resource to fuel the machines of industry. This period also generated a common-sense opinion of what art should represent, and as result a school of artist emerged whose style is referred to as Realism. They created beautiful paintings, which were often a political or social statement clothed in the artistic representation of the working-class subjects and their conditions. They turned away form the romantic idealized view of art, to a truer, sometimes offensive, window into the common everyday realities.