Letters from Vincent
Never-before-exhibited correspondence from van Gogh to a protégé displays a thoughtful exacting side of the artist
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2008, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 7)
I'm not saying that I don't flatly turn my back on reality to turn a study into a painting—by arranging the color, by enlarging, by simplifying—but I have such a fear of separating myself from what's possible and what's right as far as form is concerned....
I exaggerate, I sometimes make changes to the subject, but still I don't invent the whole of the painting; on the contrary, I find it readymade—but to be untangled—in the real world.
On October 23, 1888, Gauguin moved into the Yellow House in Arles with van Gogh, while Bernard remained in Pont-Aven. Initially, the housemates got along well enough, but the relationship became increasingly turbulent. It climaxed violently on December 23, when van Gogh acted menacingly toward Gauguin, then slashed off part of his own left ear. Gauguin returned to Paris, and van Gogh recuperated in a hospital, moved back to his house and then entered an asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, where he found only aloof doctors and deranged inmates for company. Although he kept in sporadic touch with Gauguin, almost a year elapsed before he would write to Bernard again.
Saint-Rémy, c. October 8, 1889
I hardly have a head for writing, but I feel a great emptiness in no longer being at all up to date with what Gauguin, you and others are doing. But I really must have patience.... Dear God, this is a pretty awful little part of the world, everything's hard to do here, to disentangle its intimate character, and so that it's not something vaguely true, but the true soil of Provence. So to achieve that, you have to toil hard. And so it naturally becomes a little abstract. Because it will be a question of giving strength and brilliance to the sun and the blue sky, and to the scorched and often so melancholy fields their delicate scent of thyme.
Bernard sent van Gogh photographs of his recent paintings, including Christ in the Garden of Olives. The older artist criticized these works severely, finding them to be inadequately imagined rather than truthfully observed.
Saint-Rémy, c. November 26, 1889
I was longing to get to know things from you like the painting of yours that Gauguin has, those Breton women walking in a meadow, the arrangement of which is so beautiful, the color so naively distinguished. Ah, you're exchanging that for something—must one say the word—something artificial—something affected....
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Comments (9)
Not much to say right now I need to read more!
Posted by Shirley Glenn on October 24,2011 | 10:46 AM
The letters are now online at http://vangoghletters.org/. Click on 'by correspondent' and select 'Bernard'.
Posted by Peter on November 4,2010 | 07:39 PM
I am indeed an artist, and not one for organization, or logic. I have just reread what was posted on january 2 2010,and remembered that I had indeed received a reply from you, which is long since lost in cyberspace. I wonder if there is such a place either through the computer, or other wise. That is, a place where artists who must understand their calling, and cannot do it alone....can come together. Thank you .............Alexis Kyriak
Posted by alexis kyriak on March 12,2010 | 04:52 PM
I have just reread the article on Van Gogh in January of 2008. I am thinking that the brotherhood of artists that Van Gogh speaks of might yet be....seeking fellowship with others to whom beauty is essential, I wonder if the Smithsonian would be able to connect artists with artists...you may already have a website that does just that...if not, is there a possibility of starting a way to connect?
Posted by alexis kyriak on January 2,2010 | 11:40 AM
thank you for this other view of Van Gogh, your articles are rivetting
Posted by norm wright on March 18,2008 | 07:06 PM
Having been born the day after Van Gogh at the same hour, I have always felt I had the jump on him by 24 hours. Not so inwardly. When I consider what it takes to devote oneself to painting, I know he had to lose his "sanity". But not just to painting, but to a life force that burned like the mistrals of sun in the fields he painted. If he had been any more stable, I wonder if he would have painted the way he painted. What he speaks of as the lack of brotherhood among artists, and the new Renaissance is true....it takes several men or women to grab hold of something in the air, and build it into art. I think the Renaissance that he sensed would be if artists were more in tandem with each other. If the ideas were shared with a mutual seeking of beauty. When I consider what beauty is, the thought comes that Vincent's soul was beautiful, that his words lived. That the vision, which must be if one is to make beauty, was poured out on him, and he embraced it. Even though, in the end, he destroyed himself, he always, always, affirmed life. He loved life. That is his legacy. An unbelievable living of life.
Posted by Alexis Kyriak on February 3,2008 | 06:04 PM
A Smithsonian article that would deal mainly with VanGogh's drawings and sketches would be appreciated. The few times we've seen his drawings made us feel that his real artistic genius was exibited even more there than in his paintings (which we also are very fond of).
Posted by Walt & Mary Farnsworth on January 24,2008 | 12:35 PM
I don’t know how minor a figure critics regard Bernard. Consider the attention he’s given in “Vincent Van Gogh and the painters of the Petit Boulevard” by Conelia Homburg, et al.; but notice, in those pre-Seroquel days, how genuinely in touch Vincent was, both intellectually and emotionally, with what he was about. Are those endless parallels to Louis Wain we hear so often warranted? Move that he be minor. Thank you and Mr. Lubow for a very pleasant hour or two.
Posted by Ron Webster on January 14,2008 | 05:37 PM
Often we read of artists and the great works they've done but it's nice to know them intimately...WE think their works are great...but it's good to know what THEIR opinion is on their own work. It makes them more human, and adds more meaning to their works of art. After all, what is art, but an expression of one's self and point of view? I loved reading these letters!
Posted by Amanda Barr on January 9,2008 | 02:17 PM
The letters from Van Gogh to Bernard gives me a clearer insight into Van Gogh's feelings on imagination versus reality.
Posted by Gloria Williams on January 3,2008 | 01:18 PM