Van Gogh's Night Visions
For Vincent Van Gogh, fantasy and reality merged after dark in some of his most enduring paintings, as a new exhibition reminds us
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
By the early 1880s, Theo, who was four years younger than Vincent, was finding success as a Paris art dealer and had begun supporting his brother with a monthly stipend. Vincent sent Theo his astonishing canvases, but Theo couldn't sell them. In the spring of 1889 after receiving a shipment of paintings that included the now-famous Sunflowers, the younger brother tried to reassure the elder: "When we see that the Pissarros, the Gauguins, the Renoirs, the Guillaumins do not sell, one ought to be almost glad of not having the public's favor, seeing that those who have it now will not have it forever, and it is quite possible that times will change very shortly." But time was running out.
Growing up in the Brabant, the southern region of the Netherlands, Vincent had absorbed the dark palette of great Dutch painters such as Frans Hals and Rembrandt. As an art student in Antwerp, he had the opportunity to visit museums, see the work of his contemporaries and frequent cafés and performances. In March 1886, he went to join Theo in Paris. There, having encountered young painters like Toulouse-Lautrec, Gauguin and Signac, as well as older artists such as Pissarro, Degas and Monet, he adopted the brighter colors of modern art. But with his move to Arles, in the south of France, in February 1888, the expressive force he'd been searching for at last erupted. Alone in the sun-drenched fields and gaslit night cafés of Arles, he found his own palette of bright yellows and somber blues, gay geranium oranges and soft lilacs. His skies became yellow, pink and green, with violet stripes. He painted feverishly, "quick as lightning," he boasted. And then, just as he achieved a new mastery over brush and pigment, he lost control of his life. In a fit of hallucinations and anguish in December 1888, he severed part of his ear and delivered it to a prostitute at a local brothel.
Gauguin, who had come to Arles to paint with him, fled to Paris, and van Gogh, after his neighbors petitioned the police, was locked up in a hospital. From then on, the fits recurred unpredictably, and he spent most of the last two years of his life in asylums, first in Arles and then in Saint-Rémy, painting what he could see through the bars of his window or from the surrounding gardens and fields. "Life passes like this," he wrote to Theo from Saint-Rémy in September 1889, "time does not return, but I am dead set on my work, for just this very reason, that I know the opportunities of working do not return. Especially in my case, in which a more violent attack may forever destroy my power to paint."
When the attacks seemed to subside in May 1890, van Gogh left Saint-Rémy for Auvers-sur-Oise, a small village near Paris where Dr. Paul Gachet, a local physician and friend to many painters, agreed to care for him. But van Gogh's paintings proved more successful than the doctor's treatments. Among the artist's last efforts was the tumultuous Wheatfield with Crows, in which dark and light, near and far, joy and anguish, all seem bound together in a frenzy of paint that can only be called apocalyptic. Van Gogh shot himself soon after painting it and died two days later. He was buried in a graveyard next to the field.
Theo had been at Vincent's side as the artist died and, according to Bernard, left the graveyard at Auvers "broken by grief." He never recovered. He barely had time to present a show of Vincent's paintings in his Paris apartment. Six months later he, too, died—out of his mind and incoherent in a clinic in Holland, where he had been taken by his wife because of his increasingly violent outbursts. (One theory holds that both Theo and Vincent, and probably their sister Wil, all suffered from an inherited metabolic disorder that caused their similar physical and mental symptoms.) He now lies buried next to his brother in Auvers.
Against the backdrop of this poignant biography, the new exhibition of van Gogh's night pictures at MoMA takes on added significance. For it was to the night sky, and to the stars, that van Gogh often looked for solace. The problems of painting night scenes on the spot held more than a technical interest and challenge for him. When he looked at the night sky, he wrote to Theo in August 1888, he saw "the mysterious brightness of a pale star in the infinite." When you are well, he went on, "you must be able to live on a piece of bread while you are working all day, and have enough strength to smoke and drink your glass in the evening....And all the same to feel the stars and the infinite high and clear above you. Then life is almost enchanted after all."
Van Gogh saw the night as a period of reflection and meditation after a day of activity, says MoMA curatorial assistant Jennifer Field, one of the organizers of the exhibition. "It was also this kind of metaphor for the cycle of life. And he linked this with the changing of the seasons."
In Arles, in 1888 and 1889, van Gogh's paintings took on a mystical, dreamlike quality. Straight lines became wavy, colors intensified, thick paint became thicker, sometimes squeezed straight onto the canvas from the tube. Some of these changes were later taken as a sign of his madness, and even van Gogh feared that "some of my pictures certainly show traces of having been painted by a sick man." But there was premeditation and technique behind these distortions, as he tried to put a sense of life's mysteries into paint. In a letter to Wil, he explained that "the bizarre lines, purposely selected and multiplied, meandering all through the picture, may fail to give the garden a vulgar resemblance, but may present it to our minds as seen in a dream, depicting its character, and at the same time stranger than it is in reality."
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Comments (16)
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Bravo! Very insightful article about what made van gough tick. Thank you
Posted by Grace on January 22,2013 | 04:04 PM
I AM DOING A PICTURE OF THE STARRY NIGHT
Posted by ANAIDA on December 11,2012 | 08:00 PM
Nice!!
Posted by charlene on October 18,2012 | 07:24 PM
Is it possible that Vincent Van Gogh was "near-sighted?" When I take my glasses off and view the stars ... there is a "halo effect" around all of them.
Posted by Sue Shoemaker on April 22,2012 | 10:13 AM
Thank God there were no antidepressents/antianxiety medications back then! We would not have the art, music, or literary masterpieces we now enjoy!
Posted by Jan on January 17,2012 | 09:38 AM
Was Van Gogh moderated? Yes he was,... by his brother Theo and his colleagues in the art field. He was not approved by them, and therefore any of his comments that were considered unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies back then,.. were definitely not allowed or made public. These same laws today I would say myself would apply to this post and will not be allow by you people who consider yourselves as moderators.
Posted by Robert Miller on May 2,2010 | 02:55 PM
Vincent Van Gogh and his work fascinated me endlessly as a young student and still does today. Madness, genius, the drive to be something other than the definition of his culture, brilliant colorist who most assuredly ate his pigments. Thank you Mr. Tractman for your writing.
Posted by Mary Dougherty on February 21,2010 | 07:16 PM
I really enjoyed this article. It was very interesting. Ive always been interested with van Gogh's style and technique and this article really made me more interested. Thanks Paul Tractman!
Posted by Danielle Seeds Veign on May 3,2009 | 11:13 PM
Read the article, read the comments, wrote this poem:
A Pilgrimage of Inches
In a voice etched by human frost,
his son had spoken of St. Remy
and how the wind shook the trees
above the autumn, and beyond it.
This had been recalled as bells
and sirens scattered through
the hospital twilight merely days
before his son's eyes faltered, fell.
So much death to reach a star!
So much trembling in an arc
of hand pressed to brush and
canvas swept to human core.
Many years after his son's name
—Jamie— lay etched in granite on a slab
beneath a crow-reeling sky,
he came to stand aside the same
pictures that had clapped an inner
storm upon an inner field
in a wilderness of gazing
towards a single blade of— Vincent.
The blade had flashed in France.
And now it swayed in flames
eclipsing ash-white walls
in a series of halls in New York.
At last Jamie's father's unshed tears erupted...
one deep glance stabbing home the tip
of the blade of how far he'd traveled to come
inches from Van Gogh's night.
Posted by Lucien Zell on January 14,2009 | 11:01 PM
Van Gough has always been one of my favorite artists. I was very moved by this short article by Paul Trachtman. As someone else commented he seems to have told us so much of Vincent that we had not known before. Also, another reader commented on what it meant to stand and behold Starry Night and realize it's connection between this world and eternity. I too, lost a son {an artist} and understands how he felt. Imagine the uncountable number of people who have been touched in the same way. This article has brightened, for me, a dark and snow laden day.
Posted by June Hubatsek on January 10,2009 | 02:04 PM
Absolutely love Van Gogh and have followed many exhibitions as well. Thanks to Paul Trachtman for not letting us forget this great artist with this great story.
Posted by Heidi Liebwein on January 9,2009 | 06:52 PM
It is such a beautiful heart-felt story that Mr. Eddie Shankles tells of his and his late son, Jamie's experiences with the healing capabilities of Vincent van Gogh. I can appreciate his pain and suffering, and also the great relief he and his family feels from such a moving event as presented by MOMA. Thank you to Mr. Shankles for his honesty and candor about the human condition. And also to Mr. Trachtman for his fine article. It is most inspiring.
Posted by Peter Magurean III on January 9,2009 | 04:48 PM
there was a beautiful umusual video that went thru the internet last year showing his pictures with Starry Night and musical background sung by Willie Nelson.
Posted by herbert mars on January 8,2009 | 08:05 PM
Our son, Jamie, traveled by st. remy while a student and told me while he was very ill that both the painting and the don mclean song "vincent" were very real to him. Not really art but reality. He was ill for a couple of years and died of cancer. His mother and I went to MoMA show in order to see st. remy and the rest of the Van Gogh show. I stood in front of this painting, Starry Night and finally wept. It took me 7 years of grief to stand inches from Van Gogh's night and realize all we'd lost and all we'd gained in our lives. The MoMA show is very approachable and is both public and private. The way a good church should be. Grief and love are knitted together in starry night, and we'll treasure always, the gifts we've been given as humans. Thank you MoMA for such a beautiful show and thank all the beautiful strangers who gave me some private space on that public day.
Posted by ernie shankles on January 3,2009 | 07:51 PM
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