Case Study Of Vincent Van Gogh's The Potato Eater?

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As an JP Morgan associate, I am grateful to be part of the nation’s largest bank widely known for the highest customer satisfaction among mega banks. And I am also grateful for the unique opportunity given to me by the management. I am very confident that my academic background combined with years of experience as an art museum curator will make my suggestion an ideal candidate to be placed in the front lobby of headquarter. Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter known for vibrant and expressive painting such as “Flowering Orchard”, and his work of art is the perfect choice for our front lobby. First of all, I want to talk about the artist himself. Vincent Wilhelm Van Gogh was born on 30 March 1853. He didn’t start painting until the ten years before his death; died at age of 37. He was rarely able to earn his own living and relied on his brother financially. His work of art was never appreciated during his life time and he only ever sold one before his death. So what makes his work of art unique? Why should we purchase one to place in the front lobby of headquarter? Typically, painters applied paint very thinly to economize, because paint was expensive. The physical characteristics of paint was not as important as the picture that the paint was used to …show more content…

It was completed in 1885, and Van Gogh had only recently started painting. This work of art consisted of five figures sitting around a square table eating potatoes. Although they are sitting in very dark room, expression in the face of figures are clearly visible, revealing their mixed emotions. And, these figures are so intense that you can nearly hear their conversations. This work of art failed to become the painting Van Gogh had hoped to be in his life time. But today, it has reached the great heights in the artistic community and considered Van Gogh’s very first

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