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By 1901, Gauguin had moved to an even more remote residence on the island of Hiva Oa in the Marquesas. He purchased land and built what he called, "the house of pleasure." This is where he spent his last days. He died in 1903 of an advanced case of syphilis.
Éduoard Manet
Éduoard Manet, a leading Impressionist painter, was plagued by a love triangle that spanned family ties. He married his father's mistress to preserve the family honor, and contracted syphilis soon after—probably from his father through their mutual partner. It is also rumored that the boy whom Manet claimed as his son was, in fact, his half-brother.
Edvard Munch
Edvard Munch, painter of The Scream, once said, "Illness, insanity, and death were the black angels that kept watch over my cradle and accompanied me all my life." It was something of a self-fulfilling prophesy.
In his first romantic entanglement, which took place when he was 21, Munch had a dangerous two-year liaison with the wife of a cousin. Early in his career he became enamored with French Decadent Symbolist poetry, which moved him to create a new standard for his art—emphasizing foremost a pantheistic conception of sexuality. The results were portrayals of women as helpless innocents or threatening succubi. In another dicey contretemps years later, part of a finger from Munch's left hand was shot off during a quarrel with his ex-fiancé.
Vincent van Gogh
The most famous post-Impressionist, Vincent van Gogh is often mythologized as an artist who struggled with inner demons throughout most of his life. He was an alcoholic, and may have been addicted to absinthe, a liquor that was outlawed in the 20th century because it caused convulsions, hallucinations, mental deterioration and bouts of psychosis in those who imbibed. But van Gogh is most infamous for cutting off part of his left ear with a razor and delivering the bloody token to a prostitute, advising her to "guard this object carefully."
Gianlorenzo Bernini


Comments
I found this series of vignettes to be interesting, but I was hoping to hear more about the psychological reasons why artists often behave in erratic and lawless ways. Are there any good books on the subject?
Posted by Mark Galik on January 6,2008 | 08:28PM
You forgot Egon Schiele who led an incestuous affair with his sister.
Posted by C on August 3,2009 | 11:31AM