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Amsterdam Art Museums: The
arts flourish in the city. More than 40 museums display the work
of Dutch artists, old and new. The Rijksmuseum, or State Museum,
contains paintings by such masters as Rembrandt (who lived in
Amsterdam), Vermeer, and Frans Hals. The Vincent van Gogh Museum
features more than 500 paintings and drawings by Van Gogh.
Contemporary artists and artisans display their products in shops
and galleries.
Museums and Art Galleries of Paris:
Storehouses of many priceless art treasures. The works of painters and sculptors of the late 1800's and the 1900's are displayed in the National Museum of Modern Art in the Georges Pompidou National Center of Art and Culture. The famous Louvre museum displays works considered to be of lasting greatness. It houses such masterpieces as Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa and the Greek statue Venus de Milo. The Picasso Museum, originally a mansion built in the 1600's, exhibits many of Pablo Picasso's works and paintings that the Spanish artist collected. The
Musée d'Orsay houses works of art from the 1800's, especially impressionist paintings. The museum is a converted railroad station built in 1900.
VAN GOGH, Vincent
(1853-90). One of the four great Post-impressionists (along with
Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat, and Paul Cezanne), Vincent van Gogh
is generally considered the greatest Dutch painter after
Rembrandt. His reputation is based largely on the works of the
last three years of his short ten-year painting career, and he had
a powerful influence on expressionism in modern art. He produced
more than 800 oil paintings and 700 drawings, but he sold only one
during his lifetime. His striking colors, coarse brushwork, and
contoured forms display the anguish of the mental illness that
drove him to suicide.
Vincent Willem van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853, in Zundert
in the Brabant region of The Netherlands. He was the eldest son of
a Protestant clergyman. At the age of 16 Van Gogh was apprenticed
to art dealers in The Hague, and he worked for them there and in
London and Paris until 1876.
Van Gogh disliked art dealing, and, rejected in love, he became
increasingly solitary. He began to prepare for the ministry, but
he failed the entrance examinations for seminary and became a lay
preacher. In 1878 he went to the impoverished Borinage district in
southwestern Belgium to do missionary work. He was dismissed in
1880 over a disagreement with his superiors. Penniless and with
his faith broken, he sank into despair and began to draw. He soon
realized the limitations of being self-taught and went to Brussels
to study drawing. In 1881 he moved to The Hague to work with the
Dutch landscape painter Anton Mauve, and the next summer Van Gogh
began to experiment with oil paints. His urge to be "alone
with nature" took him to Dutch villages, and his
subjects--still life, landscape, and figure--all related to the
peasants' daily hardships and surroundings. In 1885 he produced
his first masterpiece, 'The
Potato Eaters'.
Feeling too isolated, he left for Antwerp, Belgium, and
enrolled in the academy there. He did not respond well to the
school's rigid discipline, but while in Antwerp he was inspired by
the paintings of Peter Paul Rubens and discovered Japanese prints.
He was soon off to Paris, where he met Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
and Gauguin and discovered the impressionists Camille
Pissarro,
Seurat, and others. Van Gogh's two years in Paris shaped his
personal style of painting--more colorful, less traditional, with
lighter tonalities and distinctive brushwork.
Tired of city life, Van Gogh left Paris in 1888 for Arles in
the south of France. He rented and decorated a yellow house in
which he hoped to found a community of "impressionists of the
South." Gauguin joined him in October, but their relations
deteriorated, and in a quarrel on Christmas Eve Van Gogh cut off
part of his own left ear. Gauguin left, and Van Gogh was
hospitalized. Exhibiting repeated signs of mental disturbance, Van
Gogh asked to be sent to an asylum at St-Remy-de-Province. After a
year of confinement he moved to the home of a physician-artist Doctor
Gachet in Auvers-sur-Oise for two months. On July 27, 1890,
Van Gogh shot himself; he died two days later.
Despite his deteriorating mental condition, Van Gogh's time at
Arles, in the asylum, and at Auvers proved to be his greatest
productive periods. At Arles he painted with great energy the
sun-drenched fields and flowers; at St-Remy the colors of his
paintings were more muted, but the lines were bolder and the whole
more visionary; in the northern light of Auvers he adopted pale,
fresh tonalities, a broader and more expressive brushwork, and a
lyrical vision of nature. The sale of Van Gogh's 'Irises'
in 1987 brought the highest price ever paid for a work of art up
to that time--53.9 million dollars. Courtesy Compton's
Reference Collection
* Irises, 1889, 71 x 93
Sotheby's Auction, New York 1987 $54 million
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