Vincent Van Gogh Essays

  • Vincent van Gogh

    904 Words  | 2 Pages

    Vincent van Gogh was a poor artist in 19th century Europe that was constantly tortured by psychiatric issues. Van Gogh was born in Zundert, Netherlands on March 30, 1853. His father was a pastor and raised him with a very religious lifestyle and he originally set out to be a pastor himself. He was fired from his preaching job because of his intensity and fierceness and decided to be an artist. His many disorders eventually got the better of him and he was admitted to the St. Remy mental institution

  • vincent van gogh

    1417 Words  | 3 Pages

    Vincent van Gogh was a Dutch post-impressionist painter, whose work represents the archetype of expressionism, the idea of emotional spontaneity in painting. Van Gogh was born March 30, 1853, in Groot-Zundert, son of a Dutch Protestant pastor. Van Gogh's birth came one year to the day after his mother gave birth to a first, stillborn child; also named Vincent. There has been much speculation about Vincent van Gogh suffering later psychological trauma as a result of being a "replacement child" and

  • Vincent Van Gogh

    1504 Words  | 4 Pages

    100 years time." - VINCENT VAN GOGH, 1890 What could be a more disturbing image than the one of Vincent Van Gogh as the wanderer? Of his time spent in poverty and isolation he sought to help those around him, and perhaps to find himself in the process. Picture Vincent as he gives his first Sunday sermon in Isleworth, outside of London. He was so passionate about his beliefs, but never really connected with the religious world. His sermon must have really been something. Van gogh traveled to Brussels

  • Vincent Van Gogh

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    Biography of Vincent Van Gogh What drove Vincent Van Gogh, born March 30,1853, to his mental illness and suicide? Could it have been the many things he tried, but failed at in his life? He failed in many different careers, in love, and even his artwork. Van Gogh sold only one painting his entire life. Because of his mental illness, he was considered a crazy person. At the age of sixteen, Van Gogh went to go work with his Uncle Vincent, whom he was named after, as an art dealer at the Goupil and Co

  • Vincent Van Gogh

    1118 Words  | 3 Pages

    summer of 1881 Vincent Van Gogh asked for his cousin’s hand in marriage and was turned down. He was very insistent on seeing her and took action on this by holding his hand in a flame and holding up the words “Let me see her for as long as I can keep my hand in the flame” (Wikipedia, Letter 193 from Vincent to Theo, The Hague, May 14, 1882). In 1885 Vincent’s father died (ArtBook: Van Gogh; A profound and tormented genius—his life in paintings, 1998). In December of 1888, Vincent Van Gogh had been living

  • Vincent Van Gogh

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    The piece of art I choose to deconstruct was a self portrait of Vincent van Gogh he drew in 1889. I saw the painting at the National Gallery of Art in Washington. The way the self portrait was done is that it is an oil painting on canvas. The background is a dark blue, with him wearing a lighter blue colored smock, white undershirt, yellow-orange hair, and a pale gaunt face. The color used also adds emphasis to the painting. This is due to the main colors being contrasting colors the yellow-orange

  • Vincent Van Gogh

    570 Words  | 2 Pages

    Vincent Van Gogh Vincent Van Gogh; a well known name by most and a highly reputable figure amongst painters and other artists, he showed his true talent and passion for the arts in his short career, a career which only lasted ten years (Preble 117). As we know, it takes a tremendous amount of effort, awareness and creativity to convey your emotions, thoughts and feelings through your work. Here, we will attempt to construe his feelings through his work and also begin to view and understand things

  • Vincent van Gogh

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    Vincent van Gogh In present time, Vincent van Gogh is probably the most widely known and highly appreciated person of postimpressionism. During his brief lifetime, Vincent’s work went almost unknown to this world. His work now hangs in countless museums throughout the world and is considered priceless. His work became an important bridge between the 19th and 20th centuries. The art-historical term, Postimpressionism was coined by Roger Fry a British art critic, who described the various styles

  • Analysis Of Vincent Van Gogh

    1357 Words  | 3 Pages

    and Expression of Art “Vincent van Gogh” Art can mean many different things to many different people and was one of the earliest ways in which man has expressed him or herself to others, whether it was through cave drawings or hieroglyphics. It does not begin or end with just drawing or painting, items typically considered art, or the many other recognized facets of art including architecture, drama, literature, sculpting, and music. My research is based on Vincent van Gogh art, and two art paintings

  • Biography of Vincent van Gogh

    1828 Words  | 4 Pages

    art, almost every child knows at least a handful. Vincent van Gogh is one of these great names. He is world renowned for his paintings, and today they are being sold for millions, yet in his lifetime he only sold one of his works. Much is known about his life, because of his correspondence with his younger brother, and others, in the form of letters. However his life is commonly oversimplified to his works and the act of cutting off his ear. Van Gogh’s thirty seven years on earth were difficult

  • Biography of Vincent Van Gogh

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    attention to some. Van Gogh was born in Groot-Zundert, Holland on March 30, 1853. Vincent Van Gogh was born into a family of religion and strictness. His dad was a pastor in town. Van Gogh’s mother, Anna Cornelia Carbentus, was the daughter of Willem Carbentus. Her dad had bound the first Constitution of Holland. The name Vincent was given to him by his parents because a year prior to his arrival, his parents had had another son whom they tragically lost at the time of his birth. Vincent was the youngest

  • Biography of Vincent Van Gogh

    1206 Words  | 3 Pages

    Biography of Vincent Van Gogh Vincent Van Gogh was born in 1853 in Holland. Van Gogh worked various jobs before becoming a theology student in Amsterdam. But because of both professional and personal failures Van Gogh decided to "comfort the humble" and he went to live and work in a mining community. While working and living in the mining community Van Gogh found himself drawn more and more to art. So in 1880 Vincent moved to Brussels and then to Antwerp to study painting. Van Gogh didn't start

  • The Life of Vincent Van Gogh

    2663 Words  | 6 Pages

    Vincent Van Gogh is celebrated today as the greatest Dutch painter, besides Rembrandt (“Vincent Willem”). Born in Holland on March 30, 1853, Van Gogh had five other siblings and two parents, and although his mother was an artist, he never bothered with art until much later in his life (“Vincent Willem”). Van Gogh had many shortcomings in his little and dismal time on earth and it was not until his late twenties, after all else had failed, that he gave art a chance. Thanks to the help of his older

  • Vincent Van Gogh Essay

    1441 Words  | 3 Pages

    masterwork I decided to work for the assignment features one of Vincent Van Gogh’s iconic pieces, At Eternity’s Gates painted in 1890, featuring an old man sitting on a chair near a fireplace with his hands on his face wallowing in sorrow. The reason I chosen the masterwork relates to the exquisiteness Van Gogh presented when he painted the piece revealing his unique style and how he convey the emotions of the figure. Vincent Van Gogh remains an interesting figure in modern art with paintings the

  • Vincent Van Gogh Outline

    570 Words  | 2 Pages

    Figure: Vincent Van Gogh General Purpose: To inform + to persuade= To praise Specific Purpose: To praise Vincent van Gogh to my classmates for being a major influence in the art world. Thesis: Vincent Van Gogh’s life and works has served as a major influence in the art world. 1. Introduction A. “Starry, starry night; Paint your palette blue and gray; Lookout on a summer’s day; With eyes that know the darkness in my soul” This is from a song written by Don Mclean to commemorate Vincent van Gogh. The

  • The Bedroom By Vincent Van Gogh

    574 Words  | 2 Pages

    whether it’s you who are feeling it or the artist who made it. That artist happens to be the Dutch painter, Vincent Van Gogh. Vincent actually made three different versions of this painting, that are currently residing in the Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum, and Paris, Musée d'Orsay museums. He also made two sketches of this peace that are in the Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum, and Paris, Private collection, he included those sketches in his letters to friends and family. This

  • The Art Of Vincent Van Gogh

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    Vincent Van Gogh is considered the greatest Dutch painter, and highly influenced the 20th century art. In the era of the impressionism, Van Gogh was a post-impressionist painter whose work, notable for its beauty, emotion and color. One of his most famous paintings that caught my attention was the starring night over the Rhone and the café Terrace on the place du forum, Arles, at night. The reasons why the two paintings from Van Gogh caught my attention was that it has a lot of meaning and representation

  • Essay On Vincent Van Gogh

    951 Words  | 2 Pages

    name was Vincent Van Gogh. During Vincent’s early years he lived with his father, Theodorus Van Gogh, his mother, Anna Cornelia Carbentus, his two brothers, Theo and Cornelius, and his three sisters, Anna, Elisabeth, and Willemina. One of his main struggles was that he was born with mental instability for the majority of his life. But the problem that hurt most was that he was born exactly one year before the previous Vincent Willem had been still born to his mother. This forced Vincent to live the

  • The Bedroom By Vincent Van Gogh

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    This painting by Vincent Van Gogh is on display at the Art Institute of Chicago Museum, in the Impressionism exhibit. There are many things going on in this painting that catch the viewer’s eye. The first is the piece’s vibrant colors, light blues and browns, bright greens, and more. The brush strokes that are very visible and can easily be identified as very thick some might even say bold. The furniture, the objects, and the setting are easy to identify and are proportioned to each other. There

  • Vincent Van Gogh: Woe Is Me

    826 Words  | 2 Pages

    Vincent Van Gogh: Woe is Me During the last twenty years of the nineteenth century a new form of artistic painting formed. Postimpressionism was a form of art where the artist was highly individual and expressive. Some of the most creative painters in history helped to make the style a success. Paul Gauguin and Paul Cezanne are two of the most creative and popular painters among the postimpressionists, but not the master. The master of the postimpressionist movement was Vincent Van Gogh