Showing posts with label Dutch Painters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dutch Painters. Show all posts

4.28.2016

THE VAN GOGH'S BEDROOMS EXHIBITION

The current exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago of Van Gogh's Bedrooms just might be the most visited exhibition held there since the hugely popular Monet exhibition in 1995.

I couldn't believe the extremely long line outside the museum waiting to get in.  We were able to bypass this line because I had pre-purchased our tickets, but once inside we were not able to avoid the huge line to get into the exhibition.  I have been to several exhibitions at the Art Institute, but I have never seen such a crowd before. NOTE: we were there on a Saturday; I'm sure weekend days are much less crowded.

We finally entered the exhibition, and were pleasantly surprised non-flash photography was allowed. This must be a new policy. At every other special exhibition I have been to photography wasn't allowed basically because the host museum has the other paintings lent to them for the exhibition and they can't be responsible for them. 

Here are my highlights of the exhibition:

Parisian Novels (1887) 
Private Collection

This painting was the highlight! As it is from someone's private collection I had never seen even a photograph of it. The pink, blue and yellow color palette makes it so recognizable as a Van Gogh masterpiece. It is just a gorgeous painting.

Hospital at St. Rémy (1889)
Hammer Museum, Los Angeles 

This painting is one of two large landscapes showing the trees in the garden and the asylum façade behind them. Consciously or not, Van Gogh used the same color palette for this building as he did in his famous Yellow House (yellow building, green shutters, red roof).


Corner of the Asylum and the Garden with Heavy Sawed-Off Tree (1889)
Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany






























Van Gogh used "...a combination of red ocher, of green saddened with grey, of black lines that define the outlines", a combination he believed emphasized the emotional impact of this painting. Van Gogh used his time at the asylum to advance and refine the symbolic power of his painting.


Entrance to the Public Gardens in Arles (1888)
Phillips Collection, Washington DC


This painting depicts the view of the public garden located across the street from Van Gogh's yellow house in Arles.

Gauguin's Chair (1888)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam





























Since photography is not allowed at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, I didn't have the opportunity to photograph this masterpiece when I visited in 2010.

Van Gogh's Chair (1888)
National Gallery of Art, London, England



























Yet another Van Gogh painting I had not seen before. This is the companion painting to the above painting. Van Gogh painted both during the few weeks he and Gauguin lived and painted together in Arles.

Houses at  Auvers (1890)
Toledo Museum of Art

I remember seeing this painting during my visit to the Toledo Museum of Art. Working in a hamlet in the western part of Auvers, Van Gogh painted this small cluster of dwellings nestled among the walled gardens and trees.  He varied his brushstrokes in order to call attention to difference between the tiled roof and the other thatched roofs.

View of the Asylum with a Pine Tree
Musée d'Orsay, Paris



























I don't recall seeing this painting during my visit to the Musée d'Orsay several years ago.  It is one of dozens of works Van Gogh painted while sitting in the gardens of the asylum in St. Remy.

Eugene Boch
Musée d'Orsay, Paris



























Van Gogh wanted to decorate the walls of the Yellow House with portraits. Boch was a Belgian impressionist painter and one of the few friends Van Gogh met while in Arles.

Self-Portrait (1889)
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC



























Van Gogh painted this self-portrait while in the asylum. None of the other patients were willing to sit as a model for him. He is posed in this way because his left ear was disfigured from his self-mutilation the previous December.

Then, of course, there were the three "Bedrooms":

The Bedroom (October 16-17, 1888)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

























Van Gogh painted this first version to decorate the Yellow House in anticipation of the arrival of Gauguin to Arles. Note that the two portraits I posted above are included in this painting on the right wall above the bed.

The Bedroom (September 5, 1889)
Art Institute of Chicago

The second version was painted while Vincent was a patient at the asylum in St. Rémy.  The first painting had been slightly damaged in a flood in Arles; Van Gogh's brother, Theo, thought Vincent should make another copy before repairs were made to first painting in case something bad occurred. Note how Van Gogh changed the portraits hanging above the bed.

The Bedroom (September 28, 1889)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris





















In a letter to his brother Theo, Vincent explained what had inspired him to paint these pictures: he wanted to express the tranquility, and bring out the simplicity of his bedroom using the symbolism of colors. The bright colours were meant to express absolute ‘repose’ or ‘sleep’. Thus, he described: "the pale, lilac walls, the uneven, faded red of the floor, the chrome-yellow chairs and bed, the pillows and sheet in very pale lime green, the blood-red blanket, the orange-colored wash stand, the blue wash basin, and the green window", stating "I wanted to express absolute repose with these different colors".  Van Gogh's three versions of this composition are the only record he made of the interior of the Yellow House.

Van Gogh's Bedrooms is on view at the Art Institute of Chicago until May 10. For more information, click here.


Thank you for visiting.

A Great Europe Trip Planner



All photos were taken by me at the Art Institute of Chicago. Unauthorized use is prohibited.



4.23.2015

EARLY WORKS AT THE "OTHER" VAN GOGH MUSEUM

Do you know about the "other" Van Gogh museum near Amsterdam?

Helene Kröller-Müller, German by birth but married to successful Dutch businessman Anton Kröller, amassed a collection of over 11,500 art objects between 1907 and 1922. This makes her collection one of the largest private collections of the 20th century. One of her favorite artists was Vincent van Gogh...she was an early admirer of his paintings when his work were not very well known. She became the owner of more van Gogh paintings than anyone other than the van Gogh family itself, nearly 100 paintings and over 180 drawings. 

The Kröller-Müller Museum is about an hour's train ride from Amsterdam, located in the town of Otterlo in the middle of the Hoge Veluwe National Park and is home to some of van Gogh's most famous and beloved masterpieces.  Let's start with some of his early works when he was still painting with the darker palette:

Loom with Weaver (1884) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum



























Still Life with Clogs (1881) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum































Oxcart (1884) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum


Head of a Man with a Pipe (1884) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum




































Lane of Poplars at Sunset (1884) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum
Peasant Women Digging Up Potatoes (1885) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum

























Autumn Landscape (1885) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum


























Moulin de la Galette (1886) by Vincent van Gogh at the Kröller-Müller Museum
Thank you for visiting,

A Great Europe Trip Planner 

All photos were taken by me during my visit to the museum

The museum is closed Mondays and January 1.

The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday and national holidays* from 10.00 to 17.00.

* Easter, Pentecost, Christmas, King’s Day (April 27), Liberation Day (May 5).

The sculpture garden is open until 16.30.

6.10.2014

A FEW REMAINING DUTCH MASTERPIECES

It seems as if the Dutch collection at the National Gallery of Art is never ending.

In this masterpiece, purchased by Andrew Mellon in 1921, and given to the museum as part of his founding gift, Rembrandt portrays Lucretia in utter anguish, right before her act of suicide.

Lucretia (1664) by Rembrandt van Rijn



























The painting below is unusual in that the costume is executed in a manner quite different from the face; whereas the facial features are modeled with delicate nuance, the costume is hinted at with a variety of bold techniques. Rembrandt’s portraits generally do not show such markedly different techniques in the face and the costume. This and other stylistic considerations are sufficient to remove the painting from Rembrandt's own oeuvre, but instead consider it painted by one of his students.

Portrait of Rembrandt (1650) by Rembrandt workshop




























Jan Lievens is among the most fascinating, but least known Dutch artists of 17th-century Leiden and Amsterdam. He was a child prodigy, creating outstanding paintings before the age of 12. Many of his paintings have been attributed to his colleague Rembrandt which may explain why Lievens has not received the same acclaim now as he did during his own lifetime.

Bearded Man with a Beret (1630) by Jan Lievens
















































Below is yet another privately-owned painting gratefully on loan to the museum. Jan Lievens was born in 1607 which means he was only 22 or 23 years old when he did these two paintings.
 
Self-Portrait (1629-1630) by Jan Lievens
























 


As the most important of the Utrecht Caravaggisti, the name given to Dutch painters who traveled to Italy to study Caravaggio's chiaroscuro technique, ter Brugghen was instrumental in bringing the Italian artist’s style back to the Netherlands. This painting was another work that was restituted back to its original pre-WWII owners in 2008. The purchase of this painting by the museum in 2009 was a highlight since became the first Caravaggisti painting in the museum's permanent collection.
 
Bagpipe Player (1624) by Hendrick ter Brugghen
























NOTE: The museum's website recently launched their NGA Online Editions, beginning with Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century by Gallery curator of Northern Baroque paintings Arthur K. Wheelock Jr. NGA Online Editions will ultimately document more than 5,000 paintings, sculptures, and decorative arts in the nation's collection. Check out more at: 

http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/research/online-editions.html

The National Gallery of Art is located on the National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets along Constitution Avenue.
  • Admission is always FREE.
  • Open Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Open Sunday: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.
  • Closed on December 25 and January 1. 
All photos in this blog post were taken by me during my visit in September, 2013.