An expert’s guide to Vincent van Gogh: five must-read books on the Dutch artist

All you ever needed to know about the artist, from the story of the ear incident to the definitive biography and best picture book—selected by van gogh specialist martin bailey.

Vincent van Gogh's Self-Portrait as a Painter (1888) Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)

Vincent van Gogh's Self-Portrait as a Painter (1888) Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)

best biography van gogh

The Art Newspaper’ s Book Club shines a light on art books in their myriad forms and brings you exclusive extracts, interviews and recommendations from leading art world figures. Sign up to our monthly newsletter

“Van Gogh’s letters are by far the most interesting of any artist”

• Click here for more reading lists on the world's greatest artists

It can be hard to know where to begin when reading up on an artist as famous and revered as Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), especially with so many myths surrounding his relatively short life and career. “There have probably been more books published on Van Gogh than any other modern painter, except for Picasso,” says Martin Bailey, a leading Van Gogh expert and senior correspondent for The Art Newspaper . “But of course, Picasso’s artistic career spanned over 70 years, while Van Gogh’s was only a decade.”

Bailey has written a series of books on Van Gogh including The Sunflowers Are Mine: The Story of Van Gogh's Masterpiece (2013) and  Living with Vincent van Gogh: The Homes & Landscapes that Shaped the Artist (2019). He has curated Van Gogh exhibitions at the Barbican Art Gallery and National Gallery of Scotland, and was the co-curator of Tate Britain’s 2019 show Van Gogh and Britain . His weekly blog Adventures with Van Gogh is published every Friday.

Below, Bailey has selected five books that he recommends to anyone wanting to learn all about Vincent van Gogh.

best biography van gogh

Vincent van Gogh, The Letters: The Complete Illustrated and Annotated

Vincent van Gogh, The Letters: The Complete Illustrated and Annotated edition (2009) edited by Leo Jansen, Hans Luijten and Nienke Bakker

“Van Gogh’s letters are by far the most interesting of any artist. This six-volume set with 2,164 pages and 4,300 illustrations includes the texts of 927 letters, accompanied by detailed annotations. The publication resulted from a 15-year research project by Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum. It is currently out of print, but let’s hope that Thames & Hudson reprints this superlative edition. For those wanting something more manageable, a new abridged version has just been published, Vincent van Gogh: A Life in Letters . And the full letters are also online , with a user-friendly search facility (this is great for research, but for those wanting to read and savour the letters in sequence, books are better).”

best biography van gogh

Vincent van Gogh: The Complete Paintings

Vincent van Gogh: The Complete Paintings (2020) by Ingo Walther and Rainer Metzger

“For the art, the place to go is Taschen’s massive compilation of the paintings, with 871 illustrations (nearly all in colour). But it is best for the images, rather than the text. With 752 pages, it is great value for money, but even cheaper is an earlier edition published as a smaller-format paperback. Sadly, the scholarly, illustrated catalogues raisonnés on Van Gogh by Jacob-Baart de la Faille (1928, 1938, 1970) and Jan Hulsker (1977, 1996) are now dated.”

best biography van gogh

Van Gogh: The Life (2011)

Van Gogh: The Life (2011) by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith

“Another doorstopper, at 953 pages, it is the definitive biography. Two American writers have dug deep, providing a highly detailed and stimulating account of the artist’s entire life (with 28,000 footnotes available online). I add a personal proviso: I disagree with their appendix that argues that Van Gogh was shot by a local teenager, in my view it was suicide that ended his life.”

best biography van gogh

On the Verge of Insanity: Van Gogh and his Illness

On the Verge of Insanity: Van Gogh and his Illness (2016) by Nienke Bakker, Louis van Tilborgh and Laura Prins

“Much of the most interesting and innovative writing on Van Gogh now appears in exhibition catalogues. This one responds to the universal fascination with the artist’s astonishing personal story, including the ear incident and his early death. A lot of sensationalist material has been written on both issues, but four years ago the Van Gogh Museum set out to examine Van Gogh’s health in a serious, yet accessible exhibition.”

best biography van gogh

Van Gogh & Japan

Van Gogh & Japan (2018) by Louis van Tilborgh, Nienke Bakker, Cornelia Homburg, Tsukasa Kōdera and Chris Uhlenbeck

“Another exhibition catalogue from the Van Gogh Museum. This visually stunning show and book examine the impact of Japanese prints on Van Gogh’s work. We are now so accustomed to seeing images of global art, but to 19th century European eyes Japan represented an exotic tradition that proved highly stimulating for the avant-garde. The Japanese, in turn, became great lovers of Van Gogh as early as the 1920s. It is an exhilarating experience to look at Japan through Van Gogh’s eyes. Fresh research on this topic adds another dimension to the artist's story.”

And c oming soon…

“An English edition is due next year of Hans Luijten’s magnificent biography of Jo van Gogh-Bonger, Vincent’s sister-in-law. The book breaks new ground in explaining her role in the development of the artist’s rise to fame.”

Sign up to our monthly Book Club newsletter and follow us on social media using #TANbookclub

Five Books

  • NONFICTION BOOKS
  • BEST NONFICTION 2023
  • BEST NONFICTION 2024
  • Historical Biographies
  • The Best Memoirs and Autobiographies
  • Philosophical Biographies
  • World War 2
  • World History
  • American History
  • British History
  • Chinese History
  • Russian History
  • Ancient History (up to 500)
  • Medieval History (500-1400)
  • Military History
  • Art History
  • Travel Books
  • Ancient Philosophy
  • Contemporary Philosophy
  • Ethics & Moral Philosophy
  • Great Philosophers
  • Social & Political Philosophy
  • Classical Studies
  • New Science Books
  • Maths & Statistics
  • Popular Science
  • Physics Books
  • Climate Change Books
  • How to Write
  • English Grammar & Usage
  • Books for Learning Languages
  • Linguistics
  • Political Ideologies
  • Foreign Policy & International Relations
  • American Politics
  • British Politics
  • Religious History Books
  • Mental Health
  • Neuroscience
  • Child Psychology
  • Film & Cinema
  • Opera & Classical Music
  • Behavioural Economics
  • Development Economics
  • Economic History
  • Financial Crisis
  • World Economies
  • Investing Books
  • Artificial Intelligence/AI Books
  • Data Science Books
  • Sex & Sexuality
  • Death & Dying
  • Food & Cooking
  • Sports, Games & Hobbies
  • FICTION BOOKS
  • BEST NOVELS 2024
  • BEST FICTION 2023
  • New Literary Fiction
  • World Literature
  • Literary Criticism
  • Literary Figures
  • Classic English Literature
  • American Literature
  • Comics & Graphic Novels
  • Fairy Tales & Mythology
  • Historical Fiction
  • Crime Novels
  • Science Fiction
  • Short Stories
  • South Africa
  • United States
  • Arctic & Antarctica
  • Afghanistan
  • Myanmar (Formerly Burma)
  • Netherlands
  • Kids Recommend Books for Kids
  • High School Teachers Recommendations
  • Prizewinning Kids' Books
  • Popular Series Books for Kids
  • BEST BOOKS FOR KIDS (ALL AGES)
  • Ages Baby-2
  • Books for Teens and Young Adults
  • THE BEST SCIENCE BOOKS FOR KIDS
  • BEST KIDS' BOOKS OF 2023
  • BEST BOOKS FOR TEENS OF 2023
  • Best Audiobooks for Kids
  • Environment
  • Best Books for Teens of 2023
  • Best Kids' Books of 2023
  • Political Novels
  • New History Books
  • New Historical Fiction
  • New Biography
  • New Memoirs
  • New World Literature
  • New Economics Books
  • New Climate Books
  • New Math Books
  • New Philosophy Books
  • New Psychology Books
  • New Physics Books
  • THE BEST AUDIOBOOKS
  • Actors Read Great Books
  • Books Narrated by Their Authors
  • Best Audiobook Thrillers
  • Best History Audiobooks
  • Nobel Literature Prize
  • Booker Prize (fiction)
  • Baillie Gifford Prize (nonfiction)
  • Financial Times (nonfiction)
  • Wolfson Prize (history)
  • Royal Society (science)
  • Pushkin House Prize (Russia)
  • Walter Scott Prize (historical fiction)
  • Arthur C Clarke Prize (sci fi)
  • The Hugos (sci fi & fantasy)
  • Audie Awards (audiobooks)

Vincent van Gogh

Last updated: December 09, 2022

The Van Gogh Sisters

By willem-jan verlinden.

We've heard much about the crucial role that Theo van Gogh played in the life of his brother, Vincent. But Vincent also had three sisters who were a big influence on him. In fact, it was an argument with his eldest sister, Anna, that was the reason he left the Netherlands. This is their story.

Read expert recommendations

Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brothers

By deborah heiligman.

“Heiligman’s book is a multi-layered work of cultural history. It is a tightly wound story of two brothers, one of whom goes on to become one of the most famous impressionist painters and the other a seller of paintings. Both Van Gogh brothers played a central role in the history of late 19th-century art and ended up dying tragically, within months of one another. t gives the reader a feel for Western Europe in the 1870s and 1880s, for the countryside and vibrant art scene that inspired the brothers. It builds into a full biography of Van Gogh and his cohort. History is not at the center of the book; it’s the wings for the story.” Read more...

The Best Nonfiction Books for Teens

Marc Favreau , Publisher

Vincent van Gogh - The Letters

By hans luijten , leo jansen (editor) & nienke bakker (editor).

“Van Gogh obviously felt so comforted and loved by his brother. His letters are amazing, and he says everything that he’s trying to do in his art, and what he thought about other painters; what he thought about the technical process and the practicalities of that, and then all his feelings and hopes and loneliness and struggles. It’s just a very brilliant example of somebody having someone in their lives they can communicate with.” Read more...

The best books on Inkblots

Will Hobson , Translator

We ask experts to recommend the five best books in their subject and explain their selection in an interview.

This site has an archive of more than one thousand seven hundred interviews, or eight thousand book recommendations. We publish at least two new interviews per week.

Five Books participates in the Amazon Associate program and earns money from qualifying purchases.

© Five Books 2024

Visiting Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion?

You must join the virtual exhibition queue when you arrive. If capacity has been reached for the day, the queue will close early.

Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Essays

Vincent van gogh (1853–1890).

Road in Etten

Road in Etten

Vincent van Gogh

Nursery on Schenkweg

Nursery on Schenkweg

Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat (obverse: The Potato Peeler)

Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat (obverse: The Potato Peeler)

The Potato Peeler (reverse: Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat)

The Potato Peeler (reverse: Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat)

Street in Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer

Street in Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer

The Flowering Orchard

The Flowering Orchard

The Zouave

Peasant Woman Cooking by a Fireplace

Oleanders

Wheat Field with Cypresses

Corridor in the Asylum

Corridor in the Asylum

L'Arlésienne: Madame Joseph-Michel Ginoux (Marie Julien, 1848–1911)

L'Arlésienne: Madame Joseph-Michel Ginoux (Marie Julien, 1848–1911)

La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin, 1851–1930)

La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin, 1851–1930)

Olive Trees

Olive Trees

First Steps, after Millet

First Steps, after Millet

Roses

Department of European Paintings , The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2004 (originally published) March 2010 (last revised)

Vincent van Gogh, the eldest son of a Dutch Reformed minister and a bookseller’s daughter, pursued various vocations, including that of an art dealer and clergyman, before deciding to become an artist at the age of twenty-seven. Over the course of his decade-long career (1880–90), he produced nearly 900 paintings and more than 1,100 works on paper. Ironically, in 1890, he modestly assessed his artistic legacy as of “very secondary” importance.

Largely self-taught, Van Gogh gained his footing as an artist by zealously copying prints and studying nineteenth-century drawing manuals and lesson books, such as Charles Bargue’s Exercises au fusain and cours de dessin . He felt that it was necessary to master black and white before working with color, and first concentrated on learning the rudiments of figure drawing and rendering landscapes in correct perspective. In 1882, he moved from his parents’ home in Etten to the Hague, where he received some formal instruction from his cousin, Anton Mauve, a leading Hague School artist. That same year, he executed his first independent works in watercolor and ventured into oil painting; he also enjoyed his first earnings as an artist: his uncle, the art dealer Cornelis Marinus van Gogh, commissioned two sets of drawings of Hague townscapes for which Van Gogh chose to depict such everyday sites as views of the railway station, gasworks, and nursery gardens ( 1972.118.281 ).

Van Gogh’s admiration for the Barbizon artists, in particular Jean-François Millet, influenced his decision to paint rural life. In the winter of 1884–85, while living with his parents in Nuenen, he painted more than forty studies of peasant heads, which culminated in his first multifigured, large-scale composition ( The Potato Eaters , Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam); in this gritty portrayal of a peasant family at mealtime, Van Gogh wrote that he sought to express that they “have tilled the earth themselves with the same hands they are putting in the dish.” Its dark palette and coarse application of paint typify works from the artist’s Nuenen period ( 67.187.70b ;  1984.393 ).

Interested in honing his skills as a figure painter, Van Gogh left the Netherlands in late 1885 to study at the Antwerp Academy in Belgium. Three months later, he departed for Paris, where he lived with his brother Theo, an art dealer with the firm of Boussod, Valadon et Cie, and for a time attended classes at Fernand Cormon’s studio. Van Gogh’s style underwent a major transformation during his two-year stay in Paris (February 1886–February 1888). There he saw the work of the Impressionists first-hand and also witnessed the latest innovations by the Neo-Impressionists Georges Seurat and Paul Signac. In response, Van Gogh lightened his palette and experimented with the broken brushstrokes of the Impressionists as well as the pointillist touch of the Neo-Impressionists, as evidenced in the handling of his Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat ( 67.187.70a ), which was painted in the summer of 1887 on the reverse of an earlier peasant study ( 67.187.70b ). In Paris, he executed more than twenty self-portraits that reflect his ongoing exploration of complementary color contrasts and a bolder style.

In February 1888, Van Gogh departed Paris for the south of France, hoping to establish a community of artists in Arles. Captivated by the clarity of light and the vibrant colors of the Provençal spring, Van Gogh produced fourteen paintings of orchards in less than a month, painting outdoors and varying his style and technique. The composition and calligraphic handling of The Flowering Orchard ( 56.13 ) suggest the influence of Japanese prints , which Van Gogh collected. The artist’s debt to ukiyo-e prints is also apparent in the reed pen drawings he made in Arles, distinguished by their great verve and linear invention ( 48.190.1 ). In August, he painted the still lifes Oleanders ( 62.24 ) and Shoes ( 1992.374 ); each work resonates with the artist’s personal symbolism. For Van Gogh, oleanders were joyous and life-affirming (much like the sunflower); he reinforced their significance with the compositional prominence accorded to Émile Zola’s 1884 novel La joie de vivre . The still life of unlaced shoes, which Van Gogh had apparently hung in Paul Gauguin ‘s “yellow room” at Arles, suggested, to Gauguin, the artist himself—he saw them as emblematic of Van Gogh’s itinerant existence.

Gauguin joined Van Gogh in Arles in October and abruptly departed in late December 1888, a move precipitated by Van Gogh’s breakdown, during which he cut off part of his left ear with a razor. Upon his return from the hospital in January, he resumed working on a portrait of the wife of the postmaster Joseph Roulin; although he painted all the members of the Roulin family, Van Gogh produced five versions of Madame Roulin as La Berceuse , shown holding the rope that rocks her newborn daughter’s cradle ( 1996.435 ). He envisioned her portrait as the central panel of a triptych, flanked by paintings of sunflowers. For Van Gogh, her image transcended portraiture, symbolically resonating as a modern Madonna; of its palette, which ranges from ocher to vermilion and malachite, Van Gogh expressed his desire that it “sing a lullaby with color,” underscoring the expressive role of color in his art.

Fearing another breakdown, Van Gogh voluntarily entered the asylum at nearby Saint-Rémy in May 1889, where, over the course of the next year, he painted some 150 canvases. His initial confinement to the grounds of the hospital is reflected in his imagery, from his depictions of its corridors ( 48.190.2 ) to the irises and lilacs of its walled garden, visible from the window of the spare room he was allotted to use as a studio. Venturing beyond the grounds of the hospital, he painted the surrounding countryside, devoting series to its olive groves ( 1998.325.1 ) and cypresses, which he saw as characteristic of Provence. In June, he produced two paintings of cypresses, rendered in thick, impastoed layers of paint ( 49.30 ; Cypresses , Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo), likening the form of a cypress to an Egyptian obelisk in a letter to his brother Theo. These evocative trees figure prominently in a landscape, produced the same month ( 1993.132 ). Van Gogh regarded this work, with its sun-drenched wheat field undulating in the wind, as one of his “best” summer canvases. At Saint-Rémy, he also painted copies of works by such artists as Delacroix, Rembrandt , and Millet, using black-and-white photographs and prints. In fall and winter 1889–90, he executed twenty-one copies after Millet ( 64.165.2 ); he described his copies as “interpretations” or “translations,” comparing his role as an artist to that of a musician playing music written by another composer. During his last week at the asylum, he extended his repertoire of still life by painting four bouquets of Irises ( 58.187 ) and Roses ( 1993.400.5 ) as a final series comparable to the sunflower decoration he made earlier in Arles.

After a year at Saint-Rémy, Van Gogh left, in May 1890, to settle in Auvers-sur-Oise, where he was near his brother Theo in Paris and under the care of Dr. Paul Gachet, a homeopathic physician and amateur painter. In just over two months, Van Gogh averaged a painting a day; however, on July 27, 1890, he shot himself in the chest in a wheat field; he died two days later. His artistic legacy is preserved in the paintings and drawings he left behind, as well as in his voluminous correspondence, primarily with Theo, which lays bare his working methods and artistic intentions and serves as a reminder of his brother’s pivotal role as a mainstay of support throughout his career.

By the time of his death in 1890, Van Gogh’s work had begun to attract critical attention. His paintings were featured at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris between 1888 and 1890 and with Les XX in Brussels in 1890. As Gauguin wrote to him, his recent works, on view at the Indépendants in Paris, were regarded by many artists as “the most remarkable” in the show; and one of his paintings sold from the 1890 exhibition in Brussels. In January 1890, the critic Albert Aurier published the first full-length article on Van Gogh, aligning his art with the nascent Symbolist movement and highlighting the originality and intensity of his artistic vision. By the outbreak of World War I, with the discovery of his genius by the Fauves and German Expressionists, Vincent van Gogh had already come to be regarded as a vanguard figure in the history of modern art.

Department of European Paintings. “Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890).” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History . New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/gogh/hd_gogh.htm (originally published October 2004, last revised March 2010)

Further Reading

Brooks, David. Vincent van Gogh: The Complete Works . CD-ROM. Sharon, Mass.: Barewalls Publications, 2002.

Dorn, Roland, et al. Van Gogh Face to Face: The Portraits . New York: Thames & Hudson, 2000.

Druick, Douglas W., et al. Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the South . Exhibition catalogue. New York: Thames & Hudson, 2001.

Ives, Colta, et al. Vincent van Gogh: The Drawings . Exhibition catalogue. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2005. See on MetPublications

Kendall, Richard. Van Gogh's Van Gogh's: Masterpieces from the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam . Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1998.

The Complete Letters of Vincent van Gogh . 3 vols. Boston: Bullfinch Press, 2000.

Pickvance, Ronald. Van Gogh in Arles . New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1984. See on MetPublications

Pickvance, Ronald. Van Gogh in Saint-Rémy and Auvers . New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986. See on MetPublications

Selected and edited by Ronald de Leeuw. The Letters of Vincent van Gogh . London: Penguin, 2006.

Stein, Susan Alyson, ed. Van Gogh: A Retrospective . New York: New Line Books, 2006.

Stolwijk, Chris, and Richard Thomson. Theo van Gogh . Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum, 1999.

Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. Online resource.

Additional Essays by Department of European Paintings

  • Department of European Paintings. “ The Rediscovery of Classical Antiquity .” (October 2002)
  • Department of European Paintings. “ Architecture in Renaissance Italy .” (October 2002)
  • Department of European Paintings. “ Titian (ca. 1485/90?–1576) .” (October 2003)
  • Department of European Paintings. “ The Papacy and the Vatican Palace .” (October 2002)

Related Essays

  • Paul Gauguin (1848–1903)
  • Post-Impressionism
  • The Transformation of Landscape Painting in France
  • Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890): The Drawings
  • Art of the Pleasure Quarters and the Ukiyo-e Style
  • Childe Hassam (1859–1935)
  • Claude Monet (1840–1926)
  • Édouard Manet (1832–1883)
  • Frans Hals (1582/83–1666)
  • Georges Seurat (1859–1891) and Neo-Impressionism
  • Henri Matisse (1869–1954)
  • Impressionism: Art and Modernity
  • James McNeill Whistler (1834–1903)
  • Landscape Painting in the Netherlands
  • The Lure of Montmartre, 1880–1900
  • Mary Stevenson Cassatt (1844–1926)
  • The Nabis and Decorative Painting
  • Paul Cézanne (1839–1906)
  • Rembrandt (1606–1669): Paintings
  • Rembrandt van Rijn (1606–1669): Prints
  • Woodblock Prints in the Ukiyo-e Style

List of Rulers

  • List of Rulers of Europe
  • Central Europe and Low Countries, 1800–1900 A.D.
  • France, 1800–1900 A.D.
  • 19th Century A.D.
  • 20th Century A.D.
  • Agriculture
  • Barbizon School
  • Christianity
  • Floral Motif
  • French Literature / Poetry
  • Impressionism
  • Literature / Poetry
  • Low Countries
  • Modern and Contemporary Art
  • Neo-Impressionism
  • The Netherlands
  • Oil on Canvas
  • Plant Motif
  • Pointillism
  • Printmaking
  • Religious Art
  • Self-Portrait

Artist or Maker

  • Delacroix, Eugène
  • Gauguin, Paul
  • Millet, Jean-François
  • Seurat, Georges
  • Signac, Paul
  • Van Gogh, Vincent
  • Van Rijn, Rembrandt

Online Features

  • The Artist Project: “Sopheap Pich on Vincent van Gogh’s drawings”
  • Connections: “Clouds” by Keith Christiansen
  • Connections: “Dutch” by Merantine Hens

Vincent van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh was one of the world’s greatest artists, with paintings such as ‘Starry Night’ and ‘Sunflowers,’ though he was unknown until after his death.

vincent van gogh painting

(1853-1890)

Who Was Vincent van Gogh?

Vincent van Gogh was a post-Impressionist painter whose work — notable for its beauty, emotion and color — highly influenced 20th-century art. He struggled with mental illness and remained poor and virtually unknown throughout his life.

Early Life and Family

Van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853, in Groot-Zundert, Netherlands. Van Gogh’s father, Theodorus van Gogh, was an austere country minister, and his mother, Anna Cornelia Carbentus, was a moody artist whose love of nature, drawing and watercolors was transferred to her son.

Van Gogh was born exactly one year after his parents' first son, also named Vincent, was stillborn. At a young age — with his name and birthdate already etched on his dead brother's headstone — van Gogh was melancholy.

Theo van Gogh

The eldest of six living children, van Gogh had two younger brothers (Theo, who worked as an art dealer and supported his older brother’s art, and Cor) and three younger sisters (Anna, Elizabeth and Willemien).

Theo van Gogh would later play an important role in his older brother's life as a confidant, supporter and art dealer.

Early Life and Education

At age 15, van Gogh's family was struggling financially, and he was forced to leave school and go to work. He got a job at his Uncle Cornelis' art dealership, Goupil & Cie., a firm of art dealers in The Hague. By this time, van Gogh was fluent in French, German and English, as well as his native Dutch.

He also fell in love with his landlady's daughter, Eugenie Loyer. When she rejected his marriage proposal, van Gogh suffered a breakdown. He threw away all his books except for the Bible, and devoted his life to God. He became angry with people at work, telling customers not to buy the "worthless art," and was eventually fired.

Life as a Preacher

Van Gogh then taught in a Methodist boys' school, and also preached to the congregation. Although raised in a religious family, it wasn't until this time that he seriously began to consider devoting his life to the church

Hoping to become a minister, he prepared to take the entrance exam to the School of Theology in Amsterdam. After a year of studying diligently, he refused to take the Latin exams, calling Latin a "dead language" of poor people, and was subsequently denied entrance.

The same thing happened at the Church of Belgium: In the winter of 1878, van Gogh volunteered to move to an impoverished coal mine in the south of Belgium, a place where preachers were usually sent as punishment. He preached and ministered to the sick, and also drew pictures of the miners and their families, who called him "Christ of the Coal Mines."

The evangelical committees were not as pleased. They disagreed with van Gogh's lifestyle, which had begun to take on a tone of martyrdom. They refused to renew van Gogh's contract, and he was forced to find another occupation.

Finding Solace in Art

In the fall of 1880, van Gogh decided to move to Brussels and become an artist. Though he had no formal art training, his brother Theo offered to support van Gogh financially.

He began taking lessons on his own, studying books like Travaux des champs by Jean-François Millet and Cours de dessin by Charles Bargue.

Van Gogh's art helped him stay emotionally balanced. In 1885, he began work on what is considered to be his first masterpiece, "Potato Eaters." Theo, who by this time living in Paris, believed the painting would not be well-received in the French capital, where Impressionism had become the trend.

Nevertheless, van Gogh decided to move to Paris, and showed up at Theo's house uninvited. In March 1886, Theo welcomed his brother into his small apartment.

In Paris, van Gogh first saw Impressionist art, and he was inspired by the color and light. He began studying with Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec , Camille Pissarro and others.

To save money, he and his friends posed for each other instead of hiring models. Van Gogh was passionate, and he argued with other painters about their works, alienating those who became tired of his bickering.

DOWNLOAD BIOGRAPHY'S VINCENT VAN GOGH FACT CARD

Vincent Van Gogh Fact Card

Van Gogh's love life was nothing short of disastrous: He was attracted to women in trouble, thinking he could help them. When he fell in love with his recently widowed cousin, Kate, she was repulsed and fled to her home in Amsterdam.

Van Gogh then moved to The Hague and fell in love with Clasina Maria Hoornik, an alcoholic prostitute. She became his companion, mistress and model.

When Hoornik went back to prostitution, van Gogh became utterly depressed. In 1882, his family threatened to cut off his money unless he left Hoornik and The Hague.

Van Gogh left in mid-September of that year to travel to Drenthe, a somewhat desolate district in the Netherlands. For the next six weeks, he lived a nomadic life, moving throughout the region while drawing and painting the landscape and its people.

Van Gogh became influenced by Japanese art and began studying Eastern philosophy to enhance his art and life. He dreamed of traveling there, but was told by Toulouse-Lautrec that the light in the village of Arles was just like the light in Japan.

In February 1888, van Gogh boarded a train to the south of France. He moved into a now-famous "yellow house" and spent his money on paint rather than food.

Vincent van Gogh completed more than 2,100 works, consisting of 860 oil paintings and more than 1,300 watercolors, drawings and sketches.

Several of his paintings now rank among the most expensive in the world; "Irises" sold for a record $53.9 million, and his "Portrait of Dr. Gachet" sold for $82.5 million. A few of van Gogh’s most well-known artworks include:

'Starry Night'

Van Gogh painted "The Starry Night" in the asylum where he was staying in Saint-Rémy, France, in 1889, the year before his death. “This morning I saw the countryside from my window a long time before sunrise, with nothing but the morning star, which looked very big,” he wrote to his brother Theo.

A combination of imagination, memory, emotion and observation, the oil painting on canvas depicts an expressive swirling night sky and a sleeping village, with a large flame-like cypress, thought to represent the bridge between life and death, looming in the foreground. The painting is currently housed at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY.

'Sunflowers'

Van Gogh painted two series of sunflowers in Arles, France: four between August and September 1888 and one in January 1889; the versions and replicas are debated among art historians.

The oil paintings on canvas, which depict wilting yellow sunflowers in a vase, are now displayed at museums in London, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Munich and Philadelphia.

In 1889, after entering an asylum in Saint-Rémy, France, van Gogh began painting Irises, working from the plants and flowers he found in the asylum's garden. Critics believe the painting was influenced by Japanese woodblock prints.

French critic Octave Mirbeau, the painting's first owner and an early supporter of Van Gogh, remarked, "How well he has understood the exquisite nature of flowers!"

'Self-Portrait'

Over the course of 10 years, van Gogh created more than 43 self-portraits as both paintings and drawings. "I am looking for a deeper likeness than that obtained by a photographer," he wrote to his sister.

"People say, and I am willing to believe it, that it is hard to know yourself. But it is not easy to paint yourself, either. The portraits painted by Rembrandt are more than a view of nature, they are more like a revelation,” he later wrote to his brother.

Van Gogh's self-portraits are now displayed in museums around the world, including in Washington, D.C., Paris, New York and Amsterdam.

Vincent van Gogh Self-Portrait

Van Gogh's Ear

In December 1888, van Gogh was living on coffee, bread and absinthe in Arles, France, and he found himself feeling sick and strange.

Before long, it became apparent that in addition to suffering from physical illness, his psychological health was declining. Around this time, he is known to have sipped on turpentine and eaten paint.

His brother Theo was worried, and he offered Paul Gauguin money to go watch over Vincent in Arles. Within a month, van Gogh and Gauguin were arguing constantly, and one night, Gauguin walked out. Van Gogh followed him, and when Gauguin turned around, he saw van Gogh holding a razor in his hand.

Hours later, van Gogh went to the local brothel and paid for a prostitute named Rachel. With blood pouring from his hand, he offered her his ear, asking her to "keep this object carefully."

The police found van Gogh in his room the next morning, and admitted him to the Hôtel-Dieu hospital. Theo arrived on Christmas Day to see van Gogh, who was weak from blood loss and having violent seizures.

The doctors assured Theo that his brother would live and would be taken good care of, and on January 7, 1889, van Gogh was released from the hospital.

He remained, however, alone and depressed. For hope, he turned to painting and nature, but could not find peace and was hospitalized again. He would paint at the yellow house during the day and return to the hospital at night.

Van Gogh decided to move to the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence after the people of Arles signed a petition saying that he was dangerous.

On May 8, 1889, he began painting in the hospital gardens. In November 1889, he was invited to exhibit his paintings in Brussels. He sent six paintings, including "Irises" and "Starry Night."

On January 31, 1890, Theo and his wife, Johanna, gave birth to a boy and named him Vincent Willem van Gogh after Theo's brother. Around this time, Theo sold van Gogh's "The Red Vineyards" painting for 400 francs.

Also around this time, Dr. Paul Gachet, who lived in Auvers, about 20 miles north of Paris, agreed to take van Gogh as his patient. Van Gogh moved to Auvers and rented a room.

On July 27, 1890, Vincent van Gogh went out to paint in the morning carrying a loaded pistol and shot himself in the chest, but the bullet did not kill him. He was found bleeding in his room.

Van Gogh was distraught about his future because, in May of that year, his brother Theo had visited and spoke to him about needing to be stricter with his finances. Van Gogh took that to mean Theo was no longer interested in selling his art.

Van Gogh was taken to a nearby hospital and his doctors sent for Theo, who arrived to find his brother sitting up in bed and smoking a pipe. They spent the next couple of days talking together, and then van Gogh asked Theo to take him home.

On July 29, 1890, Vincent van Gogh died in the arms of his brother Theo. He was only 37 years old.

Theo, who was suffering from syphilis and weakened by his brother's death, died six months after his brother in a Dutch asylum. He was buried in Utrecht, but in 1914 Theo's wife, Johanna, who was a dedicated supporter of van Gogh's works, had Theo's body reburied in the Auvers cemetery next to Vincent.

Theo's wife Johanna then collected as many of van Gogh's paintings as she could, but discovered that many had been destroyed or lost, as van Gogh's own mother had thrown away crates full of his art.

On March 17, 1901, 71 of van Gogh's paintings were displayed at a show in Paris, and his fame grew enormously. His mother lived long enough to see her son hailed as an artistic genius. Today, Vincent van Gogh is considered one of the greatest artists in human history.

Van Gogh Museum

In 1973, the Van Gogh Museum opened its doors in Amsterdam to make the works of Vincent van Gogh accessible to the public. The museum houses more than 200 van Gogh paintings, 500 drawings and 750 written documents including letters to Vincent’s brother Theo. It features self-portraits, “The Potato Eaters,” “The Bedroom” and “Sunflowers.”

In September 2013, the museum discovered and unveiled a van Gogh painting of a landscape entitled "Sunset at Montmajour.” Before coming under the possession of the Van Gogh Museum, a Norwegian industrialist owned the painting and stored it away in his attic, having thought that it wasn't authentic.

The painting is believed to have been created by van Gogh in 1888 — around the same time that his artwork "Sunflowers" was made — just two years before his death.

Watch "Vincent Van Gogh: A Stroke of Genius" on HISTORY Vault

Edgar Allan Poe

QUICK FACTS

  • Name: Vincent van Gogh
  • Birth Year: 1853
  • Birth date: March 30, 1853
  • Birth City: Zundert
  • Birth Country: Netherlands
  • Gender: Male
  • Best Known For: Vincent van Gogh was one of the world’s greatest artists, with paintings such as ‘Starry Night’ and ‘Sunflowers,’ though he was unknown until after his death.
  • Astrological Sign: Aries
  • Brussels Academy
  • Nacionalities
  • Interesting Facts
  • Some of van Gogh's most famous works include "Starry Night," "Irises," and "Sunflowers."
  • In a moment of instability, Vincent Van Gogh cut off his ear and offered it to a prostitute.
  • Van Gogh died in France at age 37 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
  • Death Year: 1890
  • Death date: July 29, 1890
  • Death City: Auvers-sur-Oise
  • Death Country: France

We strive for accuracy and fairness.If you see something that doesn't look right, contact us !

CITATION INFORMATION

  • Article Title: Vincent van Gogh Biography
  • Author: Biography.com Editors
  • Website Name: The Biography.com website
  • Url: https://www.biography.com/artists/vincent-van-gogh
  • Access Date:
  • Publisher: A&E; Television Networks
  • Last Updated: March 4, 2020
  • Original Published Date: April 3, 2014
  • As for me, I am rather often uneasy in my mind, because I think that my life has not been calm enough; all those bitter disappointments, adversities, changes keep me from developing fully and naturally in my artistic career.
  • I am a fanatic! I feel a power within me…a fire that I may not quench, but must keep ablaze.
  • I get very cross when people tell me that it is dangerous to put out to sea. There is safety in the very heart of danger.
  • I want to paint what I feel, and feel what I paint.
  • As my work is, so am I.
  • The love of art is the undoing of true love.
  • When one has fire within oneself, one cannot keep bottling [it] up—better to burn than to burst. What is in will out.
  • For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream.
  • I do not say that my work is good, but it's the least bad that I can do. All the rest, relations with people, is very secondary, because I have no talent for that. I can't help it.
  • What is wrought in sorrow lives for all time.
  • What I draw, I see clearly. In these [drawings] I can talk with enthusiasm. I have found a voice.
  • Enjoy yourself too much rather than too little, and don't take art or love too seriously.
  • But I always think that the best way to know God is to love many things.

preview for Biography Artists Playlist

Famous Painters

frida kahlo

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Georgia O'Keefe

Georgia O'Keeffe

banksy in black stencil letters

11 Notable Artists from the Harlem Renaissance

fernando botero stares at the camera with a neutral expression on his face, he wears round black glasses and a navy suede jacket over a blue and white striped collared shirt, his hands are crossed in front of him as he leans slightly left

Fernando Botero

bob ross painting

Gustav Klimt

FILE PHOTO: Eddie Redmayne To Play Lili Elbe In Biopic Role(FILE PHOTO) In this composite image a comparison has been made between Lili Elbe (L) and actor Eddie Redmayne. Actor Eddie Redmayne will play Lili Elbe in a film biopic 'A Danish Girl' directed by Tom Hooper. ***LEFT IMAGE*** (GERMANY OUT) LILI ELBE (1886-1931). The first known recipient of sexual reassignment surgery. (Photo by ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images) **RIGHT IMAGE*** VENICE, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 05: Actor Eddie Redmayne attends a photocall for 'The Danish Girl' during the 72nd Venice Film Festival at Palazzo del Casino on September 5, 2015 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images)

The Surreal Romance of Salvador and Gala Dalí

raphael

Salvador Dalí

Encyclopedia Britannica

  • History & Society
  • Science & Tech
  • Biographies
  • Animals & Nature
  • Geography & Travel
  • Arts & Culture
  • Games & Quizzes
  • On This Day
  • One Good Fact
  • New Articles
  • Lifestyles & Social Issues
  • Philosophy & Religion
  • Politics, Law & Government
  • World History
  • Health & Medicine
  • Browse Biographies
  • Birds, Reptiles & Other Vertebrates
  • Bugs, Mollusks & Other Invertebrates
  • Environment
  • Fossils & Geologic Time
  • Entertainment & Pop Culture
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Visual Arts
  • Demystified
  • Image Galleries
  • Infographics
  • Top Questions
  • Britannica Kids
  • Saving Earth
  • Space Next 50
  • Student Center
  • Introduction & Top Questions
  • The productive decade

Vincent van Gogh: Self-Portrait

Who was Vincent van Gogh?

Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio), 1483-1520. The vision of the prophet Ezekiel, 1518. Wood, 40 x 30 cm. Inv 174. Galleria Palatina, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy

Vincent van Gogh

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

  • The Met - Biography of Vincent van Gogh
  • Artnet - Biography of Vincent van Gogh
  • Art Encyclopedia - Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890)
  • World History Encyclopedia - Biography of Vincent van Gogh
  • Art in Context - Vincent van Gogh - The Art and Life of Painter Vincent Willem van Gogh
  • Web Gallery of Art - Biography of Vincent van Gogh
  • The Art Story - Biography of Vincent Van Gogh
  • Vincent van Gogh - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
  • Vincent van Gogh - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
  • Table Of Contents

Vincent van Gogh was a Dutch painter, generally considered to be the greatest after  Rembrandt van Rijn , and one of the greatest of the  Post-Impressionists . He sold only one artwork during his life, but in the century after his death he became perhaps the most recognized painter of all time.

What did Vincent van Gogh accomplish?

During his 10-year artistic career, Vincent van Gogh created a vivid personal style, noted for its striking colour, emphatic brushwork, and contoured forms. His achievement is all the more remarkable for the brevity of his career and considering the poverty and mental illness that dogged him.

What were Vincent van Gogh’s jobs?

Vincent van Gogh’s career as an artist was extremely short, lasting only the 10 years from 1880 to 1890. Before that he had various occupations, including art dealer , language teacher, lay preacher, bookseller, and missionary worker.

How was Vincent van Gogh influential?

The work of Vincent van Gogh exerted a powerful influence on the development of much modern painting, notably Expressionism , in particular on the works of the  Fauve  painters,  Chaim Soutine , and the German Expressionists. 

What is Vincent van Gogh remembered for?

Vincent van Gogh is remembered for both the striking colour, emphatic brushwork, and contoured forms of his art and for the turmoil of his personal life. In part because of his extensive published letters, van Gogh has been mythologized in the popular imagination as the quintessential tortured artist.

Recent News

best biography van gogh

Vincent van Gogh (born March 30, 1853, Zundert, Netherlands—died July 29, 1890, Auvers-sur-Oise, near Paris, France) was a Dutch painter, generally considered the greatest after Rembrandt van Rijn , and one of the greatest of the Post-Impressionists . The striking color, emphatic brushwork, and contoured forms of his work powerfully influenced the current of Expressionism in modern art. Van Gogh’s art became astoundingly popular after his death, especially in the late 20th century, when his work sold for record-breaking sums at auctions around the world and was featured in blockbuster touring exhibitions. In part because of his extensive published letters, van Gogh has also been mythologized in the popular imagination as the quintessential tortured artist.

Van Gogh, the eldest of six children of a Protestant pastor, was born and reared in a small village in the Brabant region of the southern Netherlands. He was a quiet, self-contained youth , spending his free time wandering the countryside to observe nature. At 16 he was apprenticed to The Hague branch of the art dealers Goupil and Co., of which his uncle was a partner.

Van Gogh worked for Goupil in London from 1873 to May 1875 and in Paris from that date until April 1876. Daily contact with works of art aroused his artistic sensibility, and he soon formed a taste for Rembrandt , Frans Hals , and other Dutch masters, although his preference was for two contemporary French painters, Jean-François Millet and Camille Corot , whose influence was to last throughout his life. Van Gogh disliked art dealing. Moreover, his approach to life darkened when his love was rejected by a London girl in 1874. His burning desire for human affection thwarted, he became increasingly solitary. He worked as a language teacher and lay preacher in England and, in 1877, worked for a bookseller in Dordrecht , Netherlands . Impelled by a longing to serve humanity, he envisaged entering the ministry and took up theology; however, he abandoned this project in 1878 for short-term training as an evangelist in Brussels . A conflict with authority ensued when he disputed the orthodox doctrinal approach. Failing to get an appointment after three months, he left to do missionary work among the impoverished population of the Borinage , a coal-mining region in southwestern Belgium. There, in the winter of 1879–80, he experienced the first great spiritual crisis of his life. Living among the poor, he gave away all his worldly goods in an impassioned moment; he was thereupon dismissed by church authorities for a too-literal interpretation of Christian teaching.

Penniless and feeling that his faith was destroyed, he sank into despair and withdrew from everyone. “They think I’m a madman,” he told an acquaintance, “because I wanted to be a true Christian. They turned me out like a dog, saying that I was causing a scandal.” It was then that van Gogh began to draw seriously, thereby discovering in 1880 his true vocation as an artist. Van Gogh decided that his mission from then on would be to bring consolation to humanity through art. “I want to give the wretched a brotherly message,” he explained to his brother Theo. “When I sign [my paintings] ‘Vincent,’ it is as one of them.” This realization of his creative powers restored his self-confidence.

Vincent van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh

Dutch Draftsman and Painter

Vincent van Gogh

Summary of Vincent van Gogh

The iconic tortured artist, Vincent Van Gogh strove to convey his emotional and spiritual state in each of his artworks. Although he sold only one painting during his lifetime, Van Gogh is now one of the most popular artists of all time. His canvases with densely laden, visible brushstrokes rendered in a bright, opulent palette emphasize Van Gogh's personal expression brought to life in paint. Each painting provides a direct sense of how the artist viewed each scene, interpreted through his eyes, mind, and heart. This radically idiosyncratic, emotionally evocative style has continued to affect artists and movements throughout the 20 th century and up to the present day, guaranteeing Van Gogh's importance far into the future.

Accomplishments

  • Van Gogh's dedication to articulating the inner spirituality of man and nature led to a fusion of style and content that resulted in dramatic, imaginative, rhythmic, and emotional canvases that convey far more than the mere appearance of the subject.
  • Although the source of much upset during his life, Van Gogh's mental instability provided the frenzied source for the emotional renderings of his surroundings and imbued each image with a deeper psychological reflection and resonance.
  • Van Gogh's unstable personal temperament became synonymous with the romantic image of the tortured artist. His self-destructive talent was echoed in the lives of many artists in the 20 th century.
  • Van Gogh used an impulsive, gestural application of paint and symbolic colors to express subjective emotions. These methods and practice came to define many subsequent modern movements from Fauvism to Abstract Expressionism .

The Life of Vincent van Gogh

best biography van gogh

Vincent expressed his life via his works. As he famously said, "real painters do not paint things as they are... they paint them as they themselves feel them to be."

Important Art by Vincent van Gogh

The Potato Eaters (1885)

The Potato Eaters

This early canvas is considered Van Gogh's first masterpiece. Painted while living among the peasants and laborers in Nuenen in the Netherlands, Van Gogh strove to depict the people and their lives truthfully. Rendering the scene in a dull palette, he echoed the drab living conditions of the peasants and used ugly models to further iterate the effects manual labor had upon these workers. This effect is heightened by his use of loose brushstrokes to describe the faces and hands of the peasants as they huddle around the singular, small lantern, eating their meager meal of potatoes. Despite the evocative nature of the scene, the painting was not considered successful until after Van Gogh's death. At the time this work was painted, the Impressionists had dominated the Parisian avant-garde for over a decade with their light palettes. It is not surprising that Van Gogh's brother, Theo, found it impossible to sell paintings from this period in his brother's career. However, this work not only demonstrates Van Gogh's commitment to rendering emotionally and spiritually laden scenes in his art, but also established ideas that Van Gogh followed throughout his career.

Oil on canvas - The Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

The Courtesan (after Eisen) (1887)

The Courtesan (after Eisen)

While in Paris, Van Gogh was exposed to a myriad of artistic styles, including the Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints. These prints were only made available in the West in the mid-19 th century. Van Gogh collected works by Japanese ukiyo-e masters like Hiroshige and Hokusai and claimed these works were as important as works by European artists, like Rubens and Rembrandt. Van Gogh was inspired to create this particular painting by a reproduction of a print by Keisai Eisen that appeared on the May 1886 cover of the magazine Paris Illustré . Van Gogh enlarges Eisen's image of the courtesan, placing her in a contrasting, golden background bordered by a lush water garden based on the landscapes of other prints he owned. This particular garden is populated by frogs and cranes, both of which were allusions to prostitutes in French slang. While the stylistic features exhibited in this painting, in particular the strong, dark outlines and bright swaths of color, came to define Van Gogh's mature style, he also made the work his own. By working in paint rather than a woodblock print, Van Gogh was able to soften the work, relying on visible brushstrokes to lend dimension to the figure and her surroundings as well as creating a dynamic tension across the surface not present in the original prints.

Café Terrace At Night (1888)

Café Terrace At Night

This was one of the scenes Van Gogh painted during his stay in Arles and a painting where he used his powerful nocturnal background. Using contrasting colors and tones, Van Gogh achieved a luminous surface that pulses with an interior light, almost in defiance of the darkening sky. The lines of composition all point to the center of the work drawing the eye along the pavement as if the viewer is strolling the cobblestone streets. The café still exists today and is a "mecca" for van Gogh fans visiting the south of France. Describing this painting in a letter to his sister he wrote, "Here you have a night painting without black, with nothing but beautiful blue and violet and green and in this surrounding the illuminated area colors itself sulfur pale yellow and citron green. It amuses me enormously to paint the night right on the spot..." Painted on the street at night, Van Gogh recreated the setting directly from his observations, a practice inherited from the Impressionists. However, unlike the Impressionists, he did not record the scene merely as his eye observed it, but imbued the image with a spiritual and psychological tone that echoed his individual and personal reaction. The brushstrokes vibrate with the sense of excitement and pleasure Van Gogh experienced while painting this work.

Oil on canvas - Kröller-Muller Museum, Otterlo

Sunflowers (1888)

Van Gogh's Sunflower series was intended to decorate the room that was set aside for Gauguin at the "Yellow House," his studio and apartment in Arles. The lush brushstrokes built up the texture of the sunflowers and Van Gogh employed a wide spectrum of yellows to describe the blossoms, due in part to recently invented pigments that made new colors and tonal nuances possible. Van Gogh used the sunny hues to express the entire lifespan of the flowers, from the full bloom in bright yellow to the wilting and dying blossoms rendered in melancholy ochre. The traditional painting of a vase of flowers is given new life through Van Gogh's experimentation with line and texture, infusing each sunflower with the fleeting nature of life, the brightness of the Provencal summer sun, as well as the artist's mindset.

Oil on canvas - The National Gallery, London

The Bedroom (1889)

The Bedroom

Van Gogh's Bedroom depicts his living quarters at 2 Place Lamartine, Arles, known as the "Yellow House". It is one of his most well known images. His use of bold and vibrant colors to depict the off-kilter perspective of his room demonstrated his liberation from the muted palette and realistic renderings of the Dutch artistic tradition, as well as the pastels commonly used by the Impressionists. He labored over the subject matter, colors, and arrangements of this composition, writing many letters to Theo about it, "This time it's just simply my bedroom, only here color is to do everything, and giving by its simplification a grander style to things, is to be suggestive here of rest or of sleep in general. In a word, looking at the picture ought to rest the brain, or rather the imagination." While the bright yellows and blues might at first seem to echo a sense of disquiet, the bright hues call to mind a sunny summer day, evoking as sense of warmth and calm, as Van Gogh intended. This personal interpretation of a scene in which particular emotions and memories drive the composition and palette is a major contribution to modernist painting.

Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear (1889)

Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear

After cutting off a portion of his left earlobe during a manic episode while in Arles, Van Gogh painted Self Portrait with a Bandaged Ear while recuperating and reflecting on his illness. He believed that the act of painting would help restore balance to his life, demonstrating the important role that artistic creation held for him. The painting bears witness to the artist's renewed strength and control in his art, as the composition is rendered with uncharacteristic realism, where all his facial features are clearly modeled and careful attention is given to contrasting textures of skin, cloth, and wood. The artist depicts himself in front of an easel with a canvas that is largely blank and a Japanese print hung on the wall. The loose and expressive brushstrokes typical of Van Gogh are clearly visible; the marks are both choppy and sinuous, at times becoming soft and diffuse, creating a tension between boundaries that are otherwise clearly marked. The strong outlines of his coat and hat mimic the linear quality of the Japanese print behind the artist. At the same time, Van Gogh deployed the technique of impasto, or the continual layering of wet paint, to develop a richly textured surface, which furthers the depth and emotive force of the canvas. This self-portrait, one of many Van Gogh created during his career, has an intensity unparalleled in its time, which is elucidated in the frank manner in which the artist portrays his self-inflicted wound as well as the evocative way he renders the scene. By combining influences as diverse as the loose brushwork of the Impressionists and the strong outlines from Japanese woodblock printing, Van Gogh arrived at a truly unique mode of expression in his paintings.

Oil on canvas - The Courtauld Gallery, London

Starry Night (1889)

Starry Night

Starry Night is often considered to be Van Gogh's pinnacle achievement. Unlike most of his works, Starry Night was painted from memory, and not out in the landscape. The emphasis on interior, emotional life is clear in his swirling, tumultuous depiction of the sky - a radical departure from his previous, more naturalistic landscapes. Here, Van Gogh followed a strict principal of structure and composition in which the forms are distributed across the surface of the canvas in an exact order to create balance and tension amidst the swirling torsion of the cypress trees and the night sky. The result is a landscape rendered through curves and lines, its seeming chaos subverted by a rigorous formal arrangement. Evocative of the spirituality Van Gogh found in nature, Starry Night is famous for advancing the act of painting beyond the representation of the physical world.

Oil on canvas - The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Church at Auvers (1890)

Church at Auvers

After Van Gogh left the asylum at Saint-Remy in May 1890 he travelled north to Auvers, outside of Paris. Church at Auvers is one of the most well-known images from the last few months of Van Gogh's life. Imbuing the landscape with movement and emotion, he rendered the scene with a palette of vividly contrasting colors and brushstrokes that lead the viewer through painting. Van Gogh distorted and flattened out the architecture of the church and depicted it caught within its own shadow - which reflects his own complex relationship to spirituality and religion. Van Gogh conveys a sense that true spirituality is found in nature, not in the buildings of man. The continued influence of Japanese woodblock printing is clear in the thick dark outlines and the flat swaths of color of the roofs and landscape, while the visible brushstrokes of the Impressionists are elongated and emphasized. The use of the acidic tones and the darkness of the church alludes to the impending mental disquiet that would eventually erupt within Van Gogh and lead to his suicide. This sense of instability plagued Van Gogh throughout his life, infusing his works with a unique blend of charm and tension.

Oil on canvas - Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Paul-Ferdinand Gachet (1890)

Paul-Ferdinand Gachet

Dr. Gachet was the homeopathic physician that treated Van Gogh after he was released from Saint-Remy. In the doctor, the artist found a personal connection, writing to his sister, "I have found a true friend in Dr. Gachet, something like another brother, so much do we resemble each other physically and also mentally." Van Gogh depicts Gachet seated at a red table, with two yellow books and foxglove in a vase near his elbow. The doctor gazes past the viewer, his eyes communicating a sense of inner sadness that reflects not only the doctor's state of mind, but Van Gogh's as well. Van Gogh focused the viewer's attention on the depiction of the doctor's expression by surrounding his face with the subtly varied blues of his jacket and the hills of the background. Van Gogh wrote to Gauguin that he desired to create a truly modern portrait, one that captured the "the heartbroken expression of our time." Rendering Gachet's expression through a blend of melancholy and gentility, Van Gogh created a portrait that has resonated with viewers since its creation. A recent owner, Ryoei Saito, even claimed he planned to have the painting cremated with him after his death, as he was so moved by the image. The intensity of emotion that Van Gogh poured into each brushstroke is what has made his work so compelling to viewers over the decades, inspiring countless artists and individuals.

Oil on canvas - Private Collection

Biography of Vincent van Gogh

Vincent Van Gogh was born the second of six children into a religious Dutch Reformed Church family in the south of the Netherlands. His father, Theodorus Van Gogh, was a clergyman and his mother, Anna Cornelia Carbentus, was the daughter of a bookseller. Van Gogh exhibited unstable moods during his childhood, and showed no early inclination toward art-making, though he excelled at languages while attending two boarding schools. In 1868, he abandoned his studies and never successfully returned to formal schooling.

Early Training

Brother Theo van Gogh, who was four years younger than Vancent

In 1869, Van Gogh apprenticed at the headquarters of the international art dealers Goupil & Cie in Paris and eventually worked at the Hague branch of the firm. He was relatively successful as an art dealer and stayed with the firm for almost a decade. In 1872, Van Gogh began exchanging letters with his younger brother Theo. This correspondence continued through the end of Vincent's life. The following year, Theo himself became an art dealer, and Vincent was transferred to the London office of Goupil & Cie. Around this time, Vincent became depressed and turned to God.

After several transfers between London and Paris, Van Gogh was let go from his position at Goupil's and decided to pursue a life in the clergy. While living in southern Belgium as a poor preacher, he gave away his possessions to the local coal-miners until the church dismissed him because of his overly enthusiastic commitment to his faith. In 1880, Van Gogh decided he could be an artist and still remain in God's service, writing, "To try to understand the real significance of what the great artists, the serious masters, tell us in their masterpieces, that leads to God; one man wrote or told it in a book; another, in a picture." Van Gogh was still a pauper, but Theo sent him some money for survival. Theo financially supported his elder brother his entire career, as Vincent made virtually no money from making art.

A year later, in 1881, dire poverty motivated Van Gogh to move back home with his parents, where he taught himself to draw. He became infatuated with his cousin, Kee Vos-Stricker. His continued pursuit of her affection, despite utter rejection, eventually split the family. With the support of Theo, Van Gogh moved to the Hague, rented a studio, and studied under Anton Mauve - a leading member of the Hague School. Mauve introduced Van Gogh to the work of the French painter Jean-François Millet , who was renowned for depicting common laborers and peasants.

In January 1882, while wandering the streets of The Hague, Van Gogh encountered a young prostitute (who also worked as a seamstress and housecleaner) by the name of Clasina Maria Hoornik. He soon came to refer to her as Christien, which he then shortened to, simply, Sien. She was destitute, addicted to alcohol, pregnant, and had her five year-old daughter Maria Wilhelmina, in tow. Van Gogh took pity on her, and took her into his care for the next year and a half. This dismayed his friends and family, and some of his patrons and benefactors, including his cousin-in-law Anton Mauve, and art dealer Hermanus Tersteeg, abruptly withdrew their support for him.

While Sien's account of their relationship portrays it as one merely of convenience and benevolence, it seems that Van Gogh felt more of a connection, and even had plans to marry her. In return for his support, Sien (as well as her children and mother) modeled for over fifty of Van Gogh's works, such as his 1882 drawing Sorrow , in which Sien appears pregnant, and which the artist once called "the best figure I've drawn". It seems, however, that what Van Gogh valued about her was the challenging life she had faced (she had during her life, become pregnant four different times by four different men, all of whom had abandoned her, and two of the children had died during infancy). He once referred to her as "pockmarked" and "no longer beautiful”, and often depicted her frowning, and in difficult or unflattering situations. Sien and her family also appeared in Van Gogh’s 1883 series The Public Soup Kitchen .

Mature Period

In 1884, after moving to Nuenen, Netherlands, Van Gogh began drawing the weathered hands, heads, and other anatomical features of workers and the poor, determined to become a painter of peasant life like Millet. Although he found a professional calling, his personal life was in shambles. Van Gogh accused Theo of not trying hard enough to sell his paintings, to which Theo replied that Vincent's dark palette was out of vogue compared to the bold and bright style of the Impressionist artists that was popular. Suddenly, on March 26, 1885, their father died from a stroke, putting pressure on Van Gogh to have a successful career. Shortly afterward, he completed the Potato Eaters (1885), his first large-scale composition and great work.

Leaving the Netherlands for the last time, in 1885 Van Gogh enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. There he discovered the art of Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens , whose swirling forms and loose brushwork had a clear impact on the young artist's style. However, the rigidity of academicism of the school did not appeal to Van Gogh and he left for Paris the following year. He moved in with Theo in Montmartre - the artist's district in northern Paris - and studied with painter Fernand Cormon, who introduced the young artist to the Impressionists. The influence of artists such as Claude Monet , Camille Pissarro , Edgar Degas , and Georges Seurat , as well as pressure from Theo to sell paintings, motivated Van Gogh to adopt a lighter palette.

Vincent van Gogh Self-portrait (1887) that he made during his experiments with Neo-Impressionism

From 1886 to 1888, Van Gogh became acutely interested in Japanese prints and began to avidly study and collect them, even curating an exhibition of them at a Parisian restaurant. In late 1887, Van Gogh organized an exhibition that included his work and that of his colleagues Emile Bernard and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec , and in early 1888, he exhibited with the Neo-impressionists Georges Seurat and Paul Signac at the Salle de Repetition of the Theatre Libre d'Antoine.

Late Years and Death

The majority of Van Gogh's best-known works were produced during the final two years of his life. During the fall and winter of 1888, Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin lived and worked together in Arles in the south of France, where Van Gogh eventually rented four rooms at 2 Place Lamartine, which was dubbed the "Yellow House" for its citron hue. The move to Provence began as a plan for a new artist's community in Arles as alternative to Paris and came at a critical point in each of the artists' careers. While at the "Yellow House" Gauguin and Van Gogh worked closely together and developed a concept of color symbolic of inner emotion and not dependent upon nature. Despite enormous productivity, Van Gogh suffered from various bouts of mental instability, likely including epilepsy, psychotic episodes, delusions, and bipolar disorder. Gauguin left for Tahiti, partially as a means of escaping Van Gogh's increasingly erratic behavior. The artist slipped away after a particularly violent fight in which Van Gogh threatened Gauguin with a razor and then cut off part of his own left ear.

Advertisement for asylum in Saint-Remy

On May 8, 1889, reeling from his deteriorating mental condition, Van Gogh voluntarily committed himself into a psychiatric institution in Saint-Remy, near Arles. As the weeks passed, his mental well-being remained stable and he was allowed to resume painting. This period became one of his most productive. In the year spent at Saint-Remy, Van Gogh created over 100 works, including Starry Night (1889). The clinic and its garden became his main subjects, rendered in the dynamic brushstrokes and lush palettes typical of his mature period. On supervised walks, Van Gogh immersed himself in the experience of the natural surroundings, later recreating from memory the olive and cypress trees, irises, and other flora that populated the clinic's campus.

Shortly after leaving the clinic, Van Gogh moved north to Auvers-sur-Oise outside of Paris, to the care of a homeopathic doctor and amateur artist, Dr. Gachet. The doctor encouraged Van Gogh to paint as part of his recovery, and he happily obliged. He avidly documented his surroundings in Auvers, averaging roughly a painting a day over the last months of his life. However, after Theo disclosed his plan to go into business for himself and explained funds would be short for a while, Van Gogh's depression deepened sharply. On July 27, 1890, he wandered into a nearby wheat field and shot himself in the chest with a revolver. Although Van Gogh managed to struggle back to his room, his wounds were not treated properly and he died in bed two days later. Theo rushed to be at his brother's side during his last hours and reported that his final words were: "The sadness will last forever."

The Legacy of Vincent van Gogh

Self-portrait(1888) by van Gogh that was dedicated to Paul Gauguin

Clear examples of Van Gogh's wide influence can be seen throughout art history. The Fauves and the German Expressionists worked immediately after Van Gogh and adopted his subjective and spiritually inspired use of color. The Abstract Expressionists of the mid-20 th century made use of Van Gogh's technique of sweeping, expressive brushstrokes to indicate the artist's psychological and emotional state. Even the Neo-Expressionists of the 1980s, like Julian Schnabel and Eric Fischl , owe a debt to Van Gogh's expressive palette and brushwork. In popular culture, his life has inspired music and numerous films, including Vincente Minelli's Lust for Life (1956), which explores Van Gogh and Gauguin's volatile relationship. In his lifetime, Van Gogh created 900 paintings and made 1,100 drawings and sketches, but only sold one painting during his career. With no children of his own, most of Van Gogh's works were left to brother Theo.

Influences and Connections

Vincent van Gogh

Useful Resources on Vincent van Gogh

Simon Schama's Power of Art: Van Gogh

  • Vincent Van Gogh: A Biography By Julius Meier-Graefe
  • Stranger On The Earth: A Psychological Biography Of Vincent Van Gogh By Albert J. Lubin
  • Vincent Van Gogh: Portrait of an Artist By Jan Greenberg, Sandra Jordan
  • Dear Theo: The Autobiography of Vincent Van Gogh By Irving Stone, Jean Stone
  • Letters of Vincent Van Gogh Our Pick By Vincent Van Gogh, Mark Roskill
  • Van Gogh: The Complete Paintings Our Pick By Ingo F. Walther, Rainer Metzger
  • Van Gogh in Provence and Auvers By Bogomila Welsh-Ovcharov
  • Vincent's Colors By Vincent Van Gogh, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Vincent Van Gogh: The Drawings By Colta Ives, Susan Alyson Stein, Sjraar Van Heugten, Marije Vellekoop
  • The Vincent Van Gogh Museum
  • The Vincent Van Gogh Gallery Comprehensive image gallery of the artist's works
  • Vincent Van Gogh: The Letters Our Pick Archives of Van Gogh's complete letters
  • Van Gogh and the Colors of the Night Interactive website for the 2008 MoMA Exhibition
  • Van Gogh's Ear and Modern Painting Our Pick By Adam Gopnik / The New Yorker / January 4, 2010
  • Van Gogh's Night Visions By Paul Trachtman / Smithsonian Magazine / January 2009
  • Nocturnal Van Gogh, Illuminating the Darkness Our Pick By Roberta Smith / The New York Times / September 18, 2008
  • The Evolution of a Master Who Dreamed on Paper By Michael Kimmelman / The New York Times / October 14, 2005
  • Where Van Gogh's Art Reached its Zenith By Grace Glueck / The New York Times / October 7, 1984
  • Lust for Life Our Pick Book by Irving Stone
  • Vincent & Theo Robert Altman's film about the brothers Van Gogh
  • Don McLean's song 'Vincent (Starry Starry Night)'

Similar Art

Claude Monet: Boulevard des Capucines (1873)

Boulevard des Capucines (1873)

Georges Seurat: Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte (1884-86)

Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte (1884-86)

Related artists.

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec Biography, Art & Analysis

Related Movements & Topics

Post-Impressionism Art & Analysis

Content compiled and written by The Art Story Contributors

Edited and published by The Art Story Contributors

Vincent van Gogh

best biography van gogh

ARTISTS (1853–1890); ZUNDERT, NETHERLANDS

The prolific yet short-lived career of Vincent van Gogh has captivated the art world nearly as much as his actual paintings have. From his birth in the Netherlands to his death in France—not to mention the infamous ear incident of 1888—the Dutch post-impressionist painter was a creative force of nature who took a little longer than other artists of the era to find his calling. Now, his life has been immortalized in movies, songs, and countless art exhibits, but, as is the case with so many great artists, van Gogh wasn't celebrated much while he was alive. Find out more about the fascinating man behind The Starry Night and Sunflowers below.

1. Most of Vincent van Gogh’s paintings were done in a single decade.

A woman admires Vincent van Gogh's 'Self-Portrait,' which was painted in 1853.

Vincent Willem van Gogh grew up in the Netherlands and joined an art firm called Goupil & Cie in The Hague in 1869, when he was just 16 years old. Four years later, Goupil & Cie sent him to deal art in London, but it was never a good fit—van Gogh couldn’t muster enthusiasm for the business side of art, and he was fired in 1876. After trying his hand at teaching and even preaching, he turned to what he’d soon realize was his true vocation: painting. Largely self-taught, van Gogh painted nearly 900 works between November 1881 and July 1890, when he died at age 37.

2. Vincent van Gogh painted The Starry Night in an asylum.

'The Starry Night' by Vincent van Gogh, 1889.

Van Gogh entered the Saint-Paul-de Mausole Asylum near Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France, after a mental breakdown in late 1888. He painted The Starry Night based on the view from his second-story bedroom window—with a few significant modifications. For one, he omitted the iron bars that were almost definitely fastened to the window, since he mentioned “the iron-barred window” in a letter to his brother Theo the previous month. And he added a lovely, moonlit town in the distance, which he wouldn’t have been able to see from his window. Some historians think he modeled the village on earlier sketches he had done of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, while others believe it was inspired by the Netherlands, where van Gogh was born.

3. Nine paintings from Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers series still exist.

One of van Gogh's Arles 'Sunflowers' from 1888.

Van Gogh painted two series of Sunflowers . He completed the first series—four paintings known as the Paris Sunflowers , which all depict the flowers lying on the ground—while living with Theo in Paris in the mid-1880s. Then, when he moved into a yellow house in Arles in 1888, he set to work on what’s now called the Arles Sunflowers , which display floral arrangements in vases. He planned to decorate the house with the sunflower paintings to please fellow painter Paul Gauguin, who would visit him there. Originally, van Gogh had painted seven Sunflowers in Arles, but one was destroyed in a fire during World War II, and another was lost after it was sold into a private collection.

4. Historians aren’t sure exactly why Vincent van Gogh cut off his ear.

'Self-Portrait With Bandaged Ear' by Vincent van Gogh, painted in 1889.

Everybody agrees the infamous incident took place on December 23, 1888, while van Gogh was living in Arles, France, with fellow painter Paul Gauguin, but there are several theories as to why van Gogh took a knife or razor to his own ear that fateful night—as well as how much he cut off, and who was the recipient of history’s most revolting gift. The leading theory is that van Gogh was distraught after a quarrel with Gauguin, though others believe it was a reaction to learning his beloved brother Theo was getting married. Some even think it was Gauguin who did the slicing.

Also, while it’s possible that van Gogh only lopped off the lobe, his physician sketched an image that shows van Gogh’s entire ear is missing. Circumstances notwithstanding, van Gogh then brought his mutilated ear to a woman in a nearby brothel—long thought to be a prostitute, though recent evidence suggests she was likely a barmaid—and asked her to guard it carefully.

5. Vincent van Gogh died from a (likely) self-inflicted gunshot wound in France.

It's believed that Vincent van Gogh used this gun when he died by suicide in 1890. It went up for auction in June 2019.

Van Gogh’s auricular accident of 1888 may be due to the fact that he was likely dealing with an undiagnosed health issue at the time. The particular mental and/or physical illness van Gogh suffered from isn’t known—though a doctor did once diagnose him with a form of epilepsy—but suggestions include dementia, hallucinatory psychosis, alcoholism, syphilis, turpentine poisoning, schizophrenia, manic-depressive disorder, borderline personality disorder, and more.

On July 27, 1890, while living in the French village Auvers-sur-Oise, van Gogh walked into a field and shot himself in the abdomen. He was able to make it back to the inn where he was staying, but he died from the wound two days later, with Theo by his side. He was just 37 years old. Some have theorized  van Gogh was shot by someone else, but it’s generally believed the artist was responsible for his own death.

6. Vincent van Gogh didn’t sell many paintings commercially while he was alive.

'The Red Vineyard' by Vincent van Gogh, 1888, one of the paintings he sold during his lifetime.

Van Gogh is a pretty classic example of someone who didn’t see commercial success during his lifetime. Apart from the 19 cityscapes of The Hague that his uncle commissioned him to make early in his career, van Gogh only sold a few paintings while he was alive—one to Parisian art dealer Julien Tanguy, one that Theo sold to a London gallery, and a third, The Red Vineyard , to the sister of van Gogh’s friend, Eugène Boch.

That said, van Gogh did often trade works to other artists in exchange for food or supplies, so his paintings definitely weren’t unknown or unappreciated. Much of van Gogh’s art went to Theo after his death, but Theo himself died just a year later. At that point, Theo’s widow, Johanna, began working to organize exhibitions and promote the art of her brother-in-law across Europe, which eventually led to more mainstream success for the already-deceased artist.

A Selection of Vincent van Gogh’s Paintings

  • Still Life With Cabbage and Clogs (1881)
  • Dunes (1882)
  • Girl in the Woods (1882)
  • Cottages (1883)
  • Weaver Facing Left With Spinning Wheel (1884)
  • Cart with Red and White Ox (1884)
  • Vase With Honesty (1884-1885)
  • Head of an Old Peasant Woman With White Cap (1884)
  • The Potato Eaters (1885)
  • Skull of a Skeleton With Burning Cigarette (1886)
  • A Pair of Shoes (1886)
  • Self-Portrait (1886)
  • Japonaiserie: The Courtesan (1887)
  • Sunflowers (1886-1888)
  • The Sower (1888)
  • Portrait of the Postman Joseph Roulin (1888)
  • The Night Café (1888)
  • The Café Terrace at Night (1888)
  • Starry Night Over the Rhône (1888)
  • Portrait of the Artist’s Mother (1888)
  • Bedroom in Arles (1888)
  • Paul Gauguin (Man in a Red Beret) (1888)
  • Self-Portrait With Bandaged Ear (1889)
  • Irises (1889)
  • The Starry Night (1889)
  • Cypresses (1889)
  • Wheat Field With Reaper and Sun (1889)
  • Olive Grove (1889)
  • At Eternity’s Gate (1890)
  • Houses in Auvers (1890)
  • The Church at Auvers (1890)
  • Portrait of Dr. Gachet (1890)

Notable Quotes by Vincent van Gogh

  • “Success is sometimes the outcome of a whole string of failures.”
  • “It’s certainly true that it is better to be fervent in spirit, even if one accordingly makes more mistakes, than narrow-minded and overly cautious.”
  • “[The] great isn’t something accidental; it must be willed.”
  • “The sight of the stars always makes me dream.”
  • “Even though I’m often in a mess, inside me there’s still a calm, pure harmony and music.”
  • “The more I think about it the more I feel that there’s nothing more genuinely artistic than to love people.”
  • “It is good to love as much as one can, for therein lies true strength, and he who loves much does much and is capable of much, and that which is done with love is well done.”
  • “There is safety in the midst of danger. What would life be if we didn’t dare to take things in hand?”
  • “I seek, I pursue, my heart is in it.”

Advertisement

Supported by

Books of The Times

The Persona and the Palette

  • Share full article

best biography van gogh

By Michiko Kakutani

  • Oct. 20, 2011

He had “a sun in his head and a thunderstorm in his heart”: these words used to describe the French painter Eugène Delacroix were memorized by Vincent van Gogh and could just as easily have been applied to van Gogh himself.

From his turbulent emotional life, filled with loneliness and despair, there sprang — in a single, incandescent decade — a profusion of dazzling, vibrant paintings that fulfilled his ambition to create art that might provide consolation for the bereaved, redemption for the desperate. Images that would “say something comforting as music is comforting — something of the eternal” : phosphorescent stars cartwheeling through a nighttime sky in the yellow moonlight; a clutch of radiant irises blooming in a lush garden lit by the Mediterranean sun; a flock of crows winging their way across a golden expanse of wheat fields under a stormy sky.

In their magisterial new biography, “Van Gogh: The Life,” Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith provide a guided tour through the personal world and the work of that Dutch painter, shining a bright light on the evolution of his art while articulating what is sure to be a controversial theory of his death at the age of 37.

Whereas suicide by gun has long since become part of the myth of the tortured artist that cloaks van Gogh, Mr. Naifeh and Mr. Smith note that there are issues with that hypothesis — like the angle of the shot, the disappearance of the gun and other evidence, and the long hike that the wounded van Gogh would have had to make to return to his lodgings. Instead they propose an intriguing alternate theory, rumors of which were first heard by the art historian John Rewald in the 1930s during a visit to Auvers, the small French town where van Gogh died.

As Mr. Naifeh and Mr. Smith tell it, a rowdy teenager named René Secrétan, who liked to dress up in a cowboy costume he’d bought after seeing Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, was probably the source of the gun (sold or lent to him by the local innkeeper). Secrétan and his friends used to bully the eccentric van Gogh, and the authors suggest that there was some sort of encounter between the painter and the boys on the day of the shooting. “Once the gun in René’s rucksack was produced,” they write, “anything could have happened — intentional or accidental — between a reckless teenager with fantasies of the Wild West, an inebriated artist who knew nothing about guns, and an antiquated pistol with a tendency to malfunction.”

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and  log into  your Times account, or  subscribe  for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber?  Log in .

Want all of The Times?  Subscribe .

best biography van gogh

Vincent van Gogh

Server costs fundraiser 2024.

Mark Cartwright

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) was a Dutch post-impressionist artist whose paintings are amongst the most popular and recognizable in history. His dramatic brushwork, exuberant palette, and mastery at capturing moments in time and light revolutionised art. Only recognised at the end of his life, his struggles and triumphs have coloured exactly what we imagine it is to be an artist.

Works like Sunflowers , Café Terrace at Night , and The Starry Night have transcended the world of painting to become iconic symbols, not only of a single artist but a whole time period and art movement. Van Gogh's unique way of looking at the world was ahead of its time with the consequence that, unable to earn a living from his work or reconcile his doubts as to the value of his achievements and overcome his mental crisis, he committed suicide, alone and penniless. Not only did van Gogh leave the world the great gift of his visionary paintings but his letters, written to his younger brother Theo (1857-1891) and others, give us a fascinating and, at times, heartbreaking insight into how Vincent battled rejection, indifference, and self-harm to achieve his goals in art and life.

Van Gogh painted around 870 oil paintings in his short career, as well as sketches and watercolours. In addition, we have a tremendous amount of detail on what Vincent got up to when he was not painting thanks to him being a prolific letter writer. The artist wrote over 650 letters to Theo, and 41 replies survive from Theo. His younger brother helped him financially and with materials throughout his career; he also gave advice regarding his art and kept Vincent up-to-date with developments in the art world. Another 100 or so letters survive written to other relatives and artists. Many letters contain sketches that can reveal the planning stage of paintings and their dates. Then there are the 43 self-portraits. Neither the letters nor the portraits are unbiased, naturally, but they mean we can pursue the career of the artist from multiple directions besides mere paint and canvas.

Vincent Willem van Gogh was born on 30 March 1853 in Groot-Zundert, the Netherlands. His mother was Anna Cornelia Carbentus (1819-1907) and his father, Theodorus (1822-1885), was a pastor in the Dutch Reformed Church. Significantly, three of Vincent's uncles worked in the art trade . Vincent did well at school in Zevenbergen and Tilburg, and he took an interest in drawing. His drawing master at Tilburg, C. C. Huysmans, not only encouraged Vincent to copy old paintings, as was standard practice, but also, unusually, to copy nature. None of his surviving early drawings suggests the great talent within. In July 1869, Vincent joined the firm Goupil & Cie in the Hague branch. The company sold art prints and originals. Vincent did well, and in January 1873, he was transferred to the Brussels branch. In June, he moved to the London branch. Vincent continued to sketch, visited the capital's many galleries, and developed a taste for English poetry.

Sunflowers by van Gogh

Between 1874 and 1875, Vincent transferred to the Paris branch of Goupil's, then returned to London, then was back in Paris. All was not well, and he was dismissed in the spring of 1876. Next followed a teaching post in Ramsgate, England , and then a teaching role under the auspices of a Reverend Jones, which saw him preach in various villages outside London. Unable, it seems, to settle anywhere for very long, Vincent next turned up selling books in Dordrecht as 1876 came to a close. By now intent on a career in the Church, Vincent moved to Amsterdam in May 1877 to prepare for the theological entrance exam. Meanwhile, he continued to sketch, this time focussing on landscapes.

Van Gogh seems to have been determined to bring some kind of religious consolation to the peasantry, and in July 1878, he tried to become an evangelical missionary. Spending three months training in Brussels, Vincent was a poor speaker and was not given a post, but he went anyway to a mining town in the Borinage region of Belgium in December 1878. Eventually gaining official support, Vincent then promptly lost it in July 1879 when it was discovered he had given away practically all of his belongings to the poor. Vincent continued on his one-man mission for another 12 months until his religious zeal was quenched. His art continued in sketch form, especially of miners, and he studied art theory books to improve his draughtsmanship. At some point in 1879, he made the definitive decision to become a full-time artist. By October 1880, he was back in Brussels and hoping to join the Academy of Art there, but he soon ran out of cash and was obliged to return to his parents' home in Etten in April 1881. By 1882, a trip to The Hague and his artist cousin Anton Mauve (a prominent member of The Hague School) had given Vincent the courage to begin to paint in watercolours, a move encouraged by Theo. It was in this period that Vincent's advances towards his cousin Kee Vos-Stricker were rebuffed. A brief visit home ended with a quarrel with his father, possibly over Vincent not wanting to attend church anymore. Back in The Hague and with the help of Mauve, Vincent set up his first studio.

best biography van gogh

Vincent van Gogh: A Gallery of 30 Paintings

A full-time artist.

With his attic studio at Shenkweg, The Hague, Vincent began to use as a model a seamstress and former prostitute, Clasina Maria Hoornik (called Sien). Vincent and Sien then lived together, the artist also supporting Sien's mother and his model's two children, an act of kindness which neither his parents nor fellow artists in The Hague approved of. Cousin Mauve withdrew his support, perhaps not impressed with Vincent's progress and after the two had argued on how to improve the technical side of his drawing. Vincent continued his own methodology, studying illustrations and experimenting in lithography. One typical sketch of this period is an old man with his head in his hands in despair; Vincent gave it the title At Eternity's Gate . A mark of his progress was a commission from his uncle Cornelis Marinus for a series of views of The Hague. Then, a visit from Theo in August 1882, who brought him the supplies, led to a move into oil painting. This was a risk since oil paints were expensive, but Vincent persevered, and his letters show that he revelled in the exploration of colours.

The Potato Eaters by van Gogh

Theo was now essentially paying for Vincent's living costs, and to lessen the burden in September 1883, the artist moved to a cheaper location, Drenthe, leaving behind Sien. Not staying long, Vincent moved around the Netherlands, painting landscapes and labourers at work in the fields.

In December 1883, Vincent was back with his parents at Nuenen, although his studio was in the village. Theodorus van Gogh died in March 1885, and this put further strain on the artist's relationship with his family. He continued to paint, notably winter scenes and local weavers. A commission came for six sketches of peasant life, an all too rare case of Vincent contributing to his living costs, which were now being met by Theo with regular monthly payments. Another small source of cash was Vincent teaching a handful of local artists. Another episode of unrequited love hit Vincent when his marriage proposal to Margot Begemann, a neighbour, was refused, largely because of the disapproval of her family. Artistically, Vincent's work was maturing, and in April 1885, he produced his first great canvas, The Potato Eaters , a work he himself highly valued. He was also experimenting with brighter colours. In November 1885, Vincent was looking for new ideas, and he left for Antwerp, then in March 1886, after an unsuccessful stint studying at the Academy, he moved on to the very centre of the European art world in the late 19th century: Paris.

Vincent joined up with Theo in Paris, and the pair shared an apartment for the next two years. From his arrival in March, Vincent visited galleries, and he learnt first-hand from fellow artists of the new movement in art – impressionism – and its preoccupation with light and capturing a particular scene at a particular moment with quick brushstrokes and dramatic colours. Vincent studied under the painter Félix Cormon, copying plaster casts and exploring colours in still life works of flowers. He also encountered the Japanese prints that had become popular in Europe and which he greatly admired for their boldness of colour and composition. He painted panoramas of Paris, especially Montmartre, a whole series of windmills, and the first of his many self-portraits.

Le Moulin de Blute-Fin by van Gogh

Vincent struggled to get any of his paintings exhibited, except by friends of the impressionists like "Père" Tanguy (1825-1894), who owned an art supplies shop in Montmartre, accepting paintings as payment for materials. Vincent painted Tanguy three times. Vincent organised his own exhibition of modern artists in the rooms of a restaurant in November-December 1887, showing many of his own paintings and by fellow artists like Paul Gauguin (1848-1903) and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901). A few of the other works were sold, but none of Vincent's. The artist did sell a still life to a dealer in this period, and he often paid for meals in cafés by giving the proprietor a painting. His now-famous Self-portrait with Grey Hat (1887-8) belongs to this period, and the bold brushstrokes and use of colours demonstrate what is yet to come.

Southern France

Tired of the rivalry between artists in Paris and seeking warmer weather to boost his frail health, Vincent moved to Arles in the south of France in February 1888, where he began by far the most productive period of his career, rattling off countless paintings. While not isolated from company, Vincent did struggle to make meaningful relations with southern artists. Instead, he befriended people like Joseph Roulin, the local postman who he painted several times.

Vincent was impressed with the sunlight of southern France, and his palette was now bright and bold. The subjects are much simpler in composition than previous works (although he curiously ignored the many Roman ruins of the region). In the spring, he captured blossom trees in works like Pink Peach Trees . As summer came on, the sun and yellow fields were brilliantly captured in such works as the Sower with Setting Sun . He painted seascapes and captured more local colour at Sainte-Maries-de-la-Mer. Arles, though, dominates with scenes depicted in fiercely contrasting and saturated colours like the yellow and blue of the Café Terrace at Night and the red and green of The Night Café . By August, he had begun his startling series of sunflowers, created as a mere decoration for his home, the Yellow House. September's Starry Night over the Rhône shows that the artist is undaunted by the practicalities of impressionistic plein air (open-air) painting. His colours are now intense, the form and space are often exaggerated. Vivid monochrome backgrounds, often textured to contrast with the smoother main subject, mix with swirling brushstrokes of liberally-applied paint. He has blended impressionism with symbolism, where a painting is created to provoke the imagination and prompt an emotional response from the viewer. The inimitable van Gogh style has arrived.

Café Terrace at Night by van Gogh

Mental Instability

Vincent hoped to form an artist's community in Arles, and he invited such young painters as Gauguin and Emile Bernard (1868-1941). The former did come to Arles in October 1888, and the pair lived and worked together, both funded by Theo. The two painters influenced each other – Vincent's bright colours on Gauguin's palette, and Gauguin's encouragement that the Dutchman experiment with different subjects. Cooped up indoors as the mistral wind blew, the two strong characters often clashed, especially over art; Vincent described their arguments as "electric," and Gauguin describes even threats of violence. The crisis came on 23 December. After yet another argument, Gauguin spent the night in a hotel, and when he returned to the Yellow House the next morning, he was surprised to see the police. During the night, Vincent had cut off a part of his ear and presented it to a local prostitute. He was sent to hospital, and Theo was summoned from Paris. Gauguin left Arles immediately after the incident. Vincent put the attack down to a fever and lack of nutrition; by January, he was back painting, but more attacks of his illness, whatever it was, would follow.

In May 1889, Vincent voluntarily admitted himself to the asylum of Saint- Paul -de-Mausole in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. Still the artist suffered attacks, but in between, he was permitted to continue painting. Like his spirits, Vincent's palette is now noticeably muted. Perhaps this return to more sober works was an attempt to recapture his earlier ambition of becoming a painter of northern peasant life. It may also be significant that he now created a new version of The Potato Eaters . Doctors at the asylum diagnosed the artist's illness as epilepsy. Studies in the 20th and 21st century have come up with other theories for the artist's mental instability, notably schizophrenia or the effects of syphilis (he was treated for a venereal disease while in The Hague) or overconsumption of absinthe or a combination of all four maladies. In his own letters, Vincent mentions "the artist's madness" (LT 574), but he makes little connection between his illness and his work; he treats them as being quite independent.

Sign up for our free weekly email newsletter!

The Night Café by van Gogh

Making some improvement healthwise, Vincent was permitted to paint in the nearby fields and olive orchards, but another attack occurred during which he ate some of his oil paints. Intermittent attacks followed through to February 1890, and the recovery periods lengthened. In May 1890, following consultation with Theo and on the advice of Camille Pissarro (1830-1903), Vincent went to consult with Dr Paul Gachet (1828-1909) in Auvers-sur-Oise in northern France. Gachet was a physician, heart specialist, and advocate of homoeopathy, he was also a good friend of the impressionists. Vincent stayed in a local inn and regularly visited Gachet, painting his portrait and the many flowers in his garden. Perhaps sensitive to an end of things, the artist was more prolific than ever, painting a new canvas almost every day.

Death & Legacy

On 27 July, van Gogh, after painting in a field, suffered another attack. He shot himself in the chest with a pistol but managed to drag himself back to his inn. Theo was once again called. Vincent was still alive when his brother arrived, but he died from his wound in the morning of 29 July. An added tragedy was that the artist was just beginning to arouse the interest of art critics. A few months prior to his death, some of Vincent's works had been exhibited in Paris and Brussels (where he sold a painting). The fallen artist was buried in the cemetery of Auvers.

Starry Night by van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh's works were exhibited from as early as the 1890s in Amsterdam, Paris, and elsewhere as the symbolism movement took off. Van Gogh came to be seen by some as a bridge between impressionism, with its concern with transient light and colour, and expressionism, which saw artists attempt to convey their exaggerated inner emotional turmoil. He is generally classed as a post-impressionist painter, someone who uses the techniques of impressionism but is also interested in symbolism and permanent emotional expression in their work. Whatever group he is placed within in the history of art, the public and collectors were in no doubt as to the value of his contribution. Van Gogh's paintings have commanded a price tag of millions of dollars at auctions from the mid-20th century onwards.

Van Gogh is much more than just an artist, though. His choice to sign some of his paintings with a simple 'Vincent' has, along with his instantly recognisable style, his candid letters, and painful struggles with mental health, given the artist's life an intimacy that has helped personalise the relationship between artist and viewer like no other. The 'mad genius,' the 'tortured artist,' and the 'unrecognised talent' are all ideas that the van Gogh myth has contributed to world art and culture regardless of their validity. Few artists have captured our imaginations and intrigued us just as much by their lives as by their art like Vincent van Gogh has. This empathy is, perhaps, no accident, for it is precisely what Vincent strived to achieve: "I should one day like to show by my work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart" (LT 218D).

Subscribe to topic Related Content Books Cite This Work License

Bibliography

  • Bouruet Aubortot, Veronique. Impressionism. Flammarion, 2017.
  • Denvir, Bernard. Post-Impressionism . Thames & Hudson, 1992.
  • Howard, Michael. Encyclopedia of Impressionism. Thunder Bay Pr, 1997.
  • McQuillan, Melissa & Van Gogh, Vincent. Van Gogh . Thames & Hudson, 1989.
  • Metzger, Rainer & Walther, Ingo F. Van Gogh. La obra completa - pintura . TASCHEN, 2015.
  • Roe, Sue. The Private Lives of the Impressionists. Harper Perennial, 2007.
  • Thomson, Belinda. Impressionism. Thames & Hudson, 2022.
  • Van Gogh, Vincent (ed. Leeuw). The Letters of Vincent van Gogh . Penguin Classics, 1998.

About the Author

Mark Cartwright

Translations

We want people all over the world to learn about history. Help us and translate this definition into another language!

Questions & Answers

What is vincent van gogh known for, why did vincent van gogh cut off his ear, what are vincent van gogh's most famous paintings, related content.

Vincent van Gogh: A Gallery of 30 Paintings

Reformation in the Netherlands & the Eighty Years' War

Red-Figure Pottery

Red-Figure Pottery

Jan van Eyck

Jan van Eyck

Impressionism

Impressionism

Letters & Post in the Ancient World

Letters & Post in the Ancient World

Free for the world, supported by you.

World History Encyclopedia is a non-profit organization. For only $5 per month you can become a member and support our mission to engage people with cultural heritage and to improve history education worldwide.

Recommended Books

External Links

Cite this work.

Cartwright, M. (2022, March 17). Vincent van Gogh . World History Encyclopedia . Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/Vincent_van_Gogh/

Chicago Style

Cartwright, Mark. " Vincent van Gogh ." World History Encyclopedia . Last modified March 17, 2022. https://www.worldhistory.org/Vincent_van_Gogh/.

Cartwright, Mark. " Vincent van Gogh ." World History Encyclopedia . World History Encyclopedia, 17 Mar 2022. Web. 18 Aug 2024.

License & Copyright

Submitted by Mark Cartwright , published on 17 March 2022. The copyright holder has published this content under the following license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike . This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon this content non-commercially, as long as they credit the author and license their new creations under the identical terms. When republishing on the web a hyperlink back to the original content source URL must be included. Please note that content linked from this page may have different licensing terms.

Articles and Features

Vincent van Gogh: Life of the Post-Impressionist Master

Vincent van Gogh, Self-portrait

By Shira Wolfe

“I keep on making what I can’t do yet in order to learn to be able to do it.” Vincent van Gogh

The Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh is one of the most influential figures not only in the area of Post-Impressionism but in the whole Western art history. During his lifetime, he was commercially unsuccessful and considered a madman. He suffered intense psychological breakdowns and in 1890, he committed suicide at the age of 37. Yet some people during his lifetime believed in his artistic genius, including his younger brother Theo van Gogh and fellow artist and friend Paul Gauguin. Despite his life being tragically cut short, Van Gogh produced a vast body of work in the decade that he was active as an artist, leaving behind a total of 2100 artworks of which most date from the last two years of his life, when he spent time in psychiatric hospitals. He is now considered a pioneer of modern art and his works are among the most expensive paintings ever sold.

Vincent van Gogh, 1887

Biography of Vincent van Gogh

Vincent Willem van Gogh was born in Zundert, The Netherlands, on 30 March 1853. He was the oldest child of the Protestant minister Theodorus van Gogh and Anna Carbentus and was followed by five siblings: three sisters and two brothers. He had a very close relationship with his brother Theo, who would end up supporting Vincent’s life as an artist. At the age of 16, Vincent’s uncle found him a job as a trainee at the international art dealer Goupil & Cie. It is in this period, in 1872, that Vincent and Theo began their life-long letter correspondence – an essential source of information about the artist’s life story and exceptional work.

Vincent van Gogh, The Potato Eaters

Finding Art

Vincent only found his true calling as an artist at the age of 27. This is in part thanks to his younger brother Theo, who advised him to concentrate more on his drawings after seeing Vincent’s talent in little sketches he enclosed in his letters. In 1880 he moved to Brussels, where he started to work on his drawing technique and associated with other artists. Without having had any training, and not knowing whether he had real talent, he started out with great determination. He mostly taught himself the basics of art by studying the work of others. Vincent greatly admired the work of French 19th-century peasant painters such as Jean-François Millet and Jules Breton. Like these artists, he wanted to portray life in the countryside and honor the humble existence of the peasants living and working there. 

The next years were spent living in various places in the Netherlands. In The Hague, he took painting and drawing lessons with an uncle, the artist Anton Mauve. In this period, Vincent developed his perspective skills and also learned the basics of watercolor and oil paint. Between 1883 and 1885, Vincent lived with his parents again in Nuenen. The town was an ideal setting for the peasant paintings that Vincent was eager to create. Many farmers, rural laborers and weavers lived there and Vincent sketched and painted them whenever he could. In a letter to his brother Theo, he wrote: “There isn’t – as far as I know – a single academy where one learns to draw and paint a digger, a sower, a woman hanging a pot over the fire, or a seamstress.”

Shortly after his father passed away in March 1885, Vincent left his family home and moved into his studio in Nueunen, where he started to work on his famous work The Potato Eaters. However, the lukewarm responses to The Potato Eaters made him realize he still had a great deal to learn. Later that year, he decided to enroll at the Antwerp art academy and left the Netherlands for good. 

Vincent van Gogh, Sunflowers, repetition

A New Life in Paris

After some time at the academy in Antwerp, Vincent moved to Paris in 1886, eager to be close to the newest developments in art. When he found himself in the midst of the Parisian avant-garde art scene, he realized how old-fashioned his works made in the Netherlands seemed in comparison. Deeply inspired, he started experimenting with color, brushstrokes, lines, and planes. He also forged friendships with contemporaries such as Paul Gauguin, Émile Bernard, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. They would work together and exhibit their art in the Montmartre cafés. Thanks to his relationships with other artists and the burgeoning art scene around him, Vincent’s time in Paris proved extremely fruitful and he started developing his own expressive style.  

Vincent van Gogh, Bedroom in Arles

To the Countryside

His stay in Paris had made Vincent more sure of himself as a modern artist, yet he craved the peace of the countryside, needing quiete and space to find his direction. He, therefore, left Paris and moved to the town of Arles in the countryside of South France. In Arles, he developed his famous style with energetic brushstrokes and intense color contrasts. He painted orchards in bloom and scenes of harvesting, and also focused on portraiture, wishing to capture the essence of his time. This was an extremely prolific period in which he completed 200 paintings and over 100 drawings and watercolors. During his time in Arles, Van Gogh also drew inspiration from Japanese woodblock prints, which he collected together with his brother Theo. He admired how Japanese artists translated the world around them by using planes of color, patterns, cropping, and outlines. Van Gogh started applying these techniques in his own art and made several Japonist artworks in 1887, including his famous Bridge in the Rain (after Hiroshige) and Courtesan (after Eisen) . 

“More than ever I have a pent-up fury for work, and I think that this will contribute to curing me.” Vincent van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh, Bandaged Ear and Pipe

Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin

While living in Arles, Vincent kept in touch with other artists through letter correspondence. A particularly lively correspondence emerged between himself, Émile Bernard, and Paul Gauguin. Gauguin joined Vincent in October 1888, in the now-iconic yellow house he lived in. They worked side by side for some time, which we can even see in some of their artworks such as Gauguin’s painting Vincent van Gogh Painting Sunflowers (1888). However, the two artists’ characters and ideas did not always get along. Artistically, they disagreed strongly about how to approach art. Gauguin believed in using imagination while Vincent painted only from reality. The relationship became explosive and finally, on the night of 23 December 1888, Gauguin left the house following an argument. He later stated that Vincent had chased him and threatened him with a razor blade. Back at home, totally confused, Vincent cut off his own left ear with the razor. This mental crisis was the first in a series of serious breakdowns, often paired with hallucinations and fears. After a few months, he checked himself into a mental institution in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. Despite the despair he suffered, he believed his art was the way forward, saying: “More than ever I have a pent-up fury for work, and I think that this will contribute to curing me.”

Vincent van Gogh, Wheatfield with Crows

Vincent van Gogh’s Final Period and Death

After his hospitalization, Vincent felt he could never be fully mended again. Yet, painting and drawing gave structure to his days, and he continued working steadily to keep developing artistically. He would explore the wild garden of the hospital, and when he was not allowed outside of the institution’s walls, he painted the view from the window in his room or painted copies of prints of works by other artists. His paintings of cypresses and wheat fields from his period in the mental institution are some of his most emotionally charged and mature paintings. He also painted his famous painting Almond Blossom (1890) in the last year of his life, as a gift to his brother Theo, his sister-in-law Jo, and their newborn son who they had named after Vincent. 

In May 1890, Vincent left the institution in Saint-Rémy and headed to Auvers-sur-Oise, a town more north where his doctor Paul Gachet lived, as well as several artists. It was also closer to Paris so Theo could more easily visit. Gachet encouraged Vincent to devote himself completely to his art, which he did, completing nearly a work a day. Despite his continued passion for his work and the fortifying essence of the countryside, Vincent could not deal with his illness and the uncertainty about the future. On 27 July 1890, he walked into a wheat field and shot himself in the chest. Wounded, he made his way back to his room in Auvers-sur-Oise. Theo made it to Auvers from Paris on time to be there when his brother died. Vincent was buried at Auvers on 30 July 1890, leaving behind his incredible legacy. Theo died shortly after Vincent, and his widow Jo took it upon herself to raise public awareness of Vincent’s paintings, eventually leading to the worldwide fame that his art enjoys today. 

Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam

In 1973, the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam opened its doors to the public. The building was designed by Dutch architect Gerrit Rietveld, following an increasing demand for a special museum dedicated to the art of Vincent van Gogh. Now, two million people visit the museum every year. And though Vincent never experienced the widespread demand for his art, he knew how valuable it was. In a letter to Theo from c. 25 October 1888, he wrote:

“I can do nothing about it if my paintings don’t sell. The day will come, though, when people will see that they’re worth more than the cost of the paint and my subsistence, very meager in fact, that we put into them.” Vincent van Gogh

Relevant sources to learn more

Related articles on Artland Magazine Jo van Gogh-Bonger: The Woman Who Made the Legend Learn how the work of Van Gogh influenced Etel Adnan’s art: Colour as Language: Etel Adnan Retrospective at the Van Gogh Museum Read about the Kröller-Müller Museum, the second largest collection of Van Gogh paintings

Other relevant sources Visit The Van Gogh Exhibit: The Immersive Experience Read the letters of Vincent van Gogh

Wondering where to start?

Works under $1000

best biography van gogh

  • Biographies & Memoirs
  • Arts & Literature

best biography van gogh

Sorry, there was a problem.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required .

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Image Unavailable

Van Gogh: The Life

  • To view this video download Flash Player

best biography van gogh

Follow the author

Steven W. Naifeh

Van Gogh: The Life Hardcover – Deckle Edge, October 18, 2011

  • Print length 976 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Random House
  • Publication date October 18, 2011
  • Dimensions 6.6 x 1.96 x 9.39 inches
  • ISBN-10 0375507485
  • ISBN-13 978-0375507489
  • See all details

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com review.

Jo Bonger Van Gogh with son Vincent van Gogh Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam Vincent van Gogh, Age 13 Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam Vincent van Gogh, Age 18 Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam Theo van Gogh, 1890 Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam The Yellow House Arles Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam Graves of Vincent and Theo van Gogh Auvers Credit: Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam

About the Author

Product details.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Random House (October 18, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 976 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0375507485
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0375507489
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 3.1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.6 x 1.96 x 9.39 inches
  • #101 in Biographies of Artists, Architects & Photographers (Books)
  • #162 in German History (Books)
  • #920 in World War II History (Books)

About the author

Steven w. naifeh.

Gregory White Smith and Steven Naifeh are graduates of Harvard Law School.

Mr. Naifeh, who has written for art periodicals and has lectured at numerous museums including the National Gallery of Art, studied art history at Princeton and did his graduate work at the Fogg Art Museum of Harvard University.

Together they have written many books on art and other subjects, including four New York Times bestsellers. Their biography Jackson Pollock: An American Saga won the Pulitzer Prize and was a finalist for the National Book Award. It also inspired the Academy Award-winning 2000 film Pollock starring Ed Harris and Marcia Gay Harden as well as John Updike's novel Seek My Face.

Naifeh and Smith have been profiled in The New Yorker, The New York Times, USA Today, and People, and have appeared on 60 Minutes, The Oprah Winfrey Show, Larry King Live, Charlie Rose, and the Today show.

Customer reviews

  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 5 star 78% 15% 4% 1% 2% 78%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 4 star 78% 15% 4% 1% 2% 15%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 3 star 78% 15% 4% 1% 2% 4%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 2 star 78% 15% 4% 1% 2% 1%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 1 star 78% 15% 4% 1% 2% 2%

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Customers say

Customers find the visuals engaging and masterfully written. They also describe the story as noteworthy and worth your money. Readers describe the content as well-told and helpful. Opinions are mixed on the length, emotional tone, and reading pace. Some find it really long, while others say it's very slow.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

Customers find the book well written, well told, and thorough. They say it's one of the most involved biographies they've read, with exceptional vision and insight. Customers also say the authors employ a broad vocabulary, and the book is easy to get through. They appreciate the brilliant voice and wonderful work.

"...I thought the biographic essence of the book provided helpful information to assist the reader in understanding why Vincent's life was filled with..." Read more

"...The authors employ a broad vocabulary ; they do not shy away from using the most appropriate words…..lucubration, tenebrous, Manichean, etc...." Read more

"...The writing absolutely sparkles like a starry night and provides a strangely satisfying feeling in reading about such a tormented soul...." Read more

"...Some sections are well written and well told and go by very quickly...100 pages at a crack (great when you're dealing with an 800+ page book)!..." Read more

Customers find the story amazing, engrossing, and rich. They also say the book is worth the read and does not disappoint.

"...The many color plates of his significant works are worth the modest cost of this book...." Read more

"...It is still perhaps the most interesting museum we have ever visited. That's because it had--what is today called--a "back story."..." Read more

"...schooling he emerged from his letters as a gifted writer and a reader of high quality (French) literature...." Read more

"...Passages of the book are simply beautiful and noteworthy ...." Read more

Customers find the book masterfully written, engaging, and satisfying. They also say it never gets bogged down.

"...(ebook) and Vincent only lived 37 years, I am grateful it was so captivating in its presentation of one of the most wretched souls to ever live...." Read more

"...It is very exciting to read about Vincent's opinion of the 'new' works by Monet and other masters (now)...." Read more

"...Incredibly well researched book packed wirh detail and yet never boring ." Read more

"Such a wonderful and fulfilling read ...." Read more

Customers find the visuals in the book engaging and soulful. They also say it gives the reader an excellent perspective into the life of Vincent Van Gogh.

"...but this is a truly brutal read that provides the reader with a visceral portrait of a troubled artist. I highly recommend this book." Read more

" Stunning in the amount of detail and yet never dry or boring this is as an extensive and insightful biography as any I've read...." Read more

" Totally engaging portrait of an artist whose life and development are crucial to understanding modern art...." Read more

"...A few other notes:1. I wish there had been more pictures ...." Read more

Customers have mixed opinions about the length of the book. Some find it really long, while others say it's too long and long-winded.

"...It is over 860 pages long and contains a thorough, long, and extraordinarily detailed account of everything about Van Gogh’s life...." Read more

"...The product of this approach is an overly long , scholarly treatise, not a thoughtfully considered, readable book...." Read more

"...Beautifully written, massive in scope , detail and informative while entertaining ,this is a model for what good biography should and can be...." Read more

"...Having said that I do think that the book seems excessively long and could have been much condensed...." Read more

Customers have mixed opinions about the emotional tone of the book. Some find it entertaining, moving, and horrifying. They say it's a debunking of the suicide myth around Vincent's death, while others say it’s the most depressing book they've read in years.

"...It gives you a different perspective on his paintings. Some of it is sad ." Read more

"...But be prepared for some heavy, sad, dreary and depressing reading that goes on and on and on and on... 800 pages of a depressed, delusional..." Read more

"...making the vagaries of Van Gogh's personality and saga both painful and sad , fascinating and touching. Great read...." Read more

"This is the most depressing book I've read in years. There was nothing happy in this poor man's life...." Read more

Customers are mixed about the reading pace. Some mention it's a fast read for a book of this length, while others say it drags on for ages at times.

"...Some sections are well written and well told and go by very quickly ...100 pages at a crack (great when you're dealing with an 800+ page book)!..." Read more

"...At well over 900 pages in length it requires a lot of time to read and process. Expect to stay at this reading effort a long while...." Read more

"...I was certainly impressed by his manic energy and speed (often, the speed of one's speech can be confused with brilliance), but I came away from..." Read more

"...It was not a quick read , but being endlessly fascinated by this man, I loved every bit of it...." Read more

Reviews with images

Customer Image

  • Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews

Top reviews from the United States

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. please try again later..

best biography van gogh

Top reviews from other countries

best biography van gogh

  • About Amazon
  • Investor Relations
  • Amazon Devices
  • Amazon Science
  • Sell products on Amazon
  • Sell on Amazon Business
  • Sell apps on Amazon
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Self-Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
  • › See More Make Money with Us
  • Amazon Business Card
  • Shop with Points
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Amazon Currency Converter
  • Amazon and COVID-19
  • Your Account
  • Your Orders
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Returns & Replacements
  • Manage Your Content and Devices
 
 
 
   
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Consumer Health Data Privacy Disclosure
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices

best biography van gogh

5 Books About Van Gogh You Have to Read

Errika Gerakiti 13 June 2024 min Read

best biography van gogh

Vincent Van Gogh, The Starry Night, 1889, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA.

Recommended

best biography van gogh

European Art

10 Vincent van Gogh Self-Portraits You Need to Know

best biography van gogh

Museum Stories

10 Highlights from the Van Gogh Museum

best biography van gogh

7 Extraordinary Van Gogh Paintings You’ve Probably Never Seen

Vincent van Gogh is one of those artists whose reputation precedes them. The tormented child of the art, the cursed artist, the genius, the weird, or the eccentric are only a few of the labels that are used to describe him. Today, Van Gogh is one of the most famous and most loved painters worldwide. Here, we suggest five books about this artist. These are great reads if you are interested in learning about the personal life of the artist, but also how he viewed his life and his artistic evolution.

1. The Yellow House: Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Nine Turbulent Weeks in Arles

From October to December 1888, Van Gogh and Gauguin lived under the same roof in Arles, a French suburb. They had an exceptionally creative time together. They gave each other feedback and made some of their most distinguished works. However, Van Gogh bent under the pressure of cohabitation, and the crisis of his mental illness became very severe. He fought with Gauguin which is how he came to mutilate himself.

Vincent Van Gogh, The Yellow House (The Street), September 1888, Credits: Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation).

The author of this book is Martin Gayford, who is a well-known art critic. One might expect that he would use stilted language, but that is not the case. The Yellow House is pure literature. It gets inside Van Gogh’s psyche and makes you understand all about his state of mind. If you read this book, you will either fall in love with Van Gogh, or you will want to hug him and tell him that he’s not alone. In our opinion, it is one of the best books about Van Gogh.

You can check this book here .

Cover of the current edition of the book. Books about Van Gogh

2. The Letters of Vincent van Gogh

What is a better way to learn about Van Gogh than reading his personal letters? This next book that we recommend is a selection of them. The letters narrate his personal story and artistic evolution. You will read about his relationship with religion, his unsuccessful effort to find love, and how he coped with the attacks of his mental illness. Aside from the popular belief that Van Gogh was a madman, this book proves he had great emotional and spiritual depth.

Also, the Penguin Classics’ edition links the letters to biographical details and gives insights into the events of his life. It is a very interesting book drawing every art historian and everyone who loves Van Gogh.

Cover of the current edition. Books about Van Gogh

3. Van Gogh: Complete Works

Taschen is famous for its artistic series, and this book is a great addition. It is a catalog of Van Gogh’s 871 paintings , all in color! It also provides a detailed monograph on his life. In addition, it shows how the artist was so much more than his depression and anxiety and how he struggled for recognition.

You can check this catalogue here .

Cover of the current edition. Books about Van Gogh

Barbara Stok created a graphic novel that narrates Van Gogh’s life in Arles. The illustrations are beautiful and vivid; however, the art is sometimes shocking when depicting his mental illness. Nevertheless, it is moving and will bring you to tears.

You can check this graphic novel here .

Cover of the graphic novel.

5. Van Gogh: The Life

Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith cooperated closely with the Van Gogh Museum for this book. Van Gogh: The Life brings to light previously unknown information about the artist’s life, his relationship with his brother Theo, and the mysterious circumstances under which he committed suicide. In addition, the book is a New York Times bestseller and nominated one of the best books of the year by the Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and the BookReporter.

Cover of the current edition.

  • Van Gogh Museum
  • Vincent van Gogh

Get your daily dose of art

Click and follow us on Google News to stay updated all the time

best biography van gogh

We love art history and writing about it. Your support helps us to sustain DailyArt Magazine and keep it running.

DailyArt Magazine needs your support. Every contribution, however big or small, is very valuable for our future. Thanks to it, we will be able to sustain and grow the Magazine. Thank you for your help!

best biography van gogh

Errika Gerakiti

Errika has a Master's degree in curatorial practices. She has been a writer for DailyArt Magazine since 2019 and loves sharing what she loves: weird, unusual art, female artists, and contemporary creations.

best biography van gogh

The Downfall of the Mighty Lydian King Candaules in Art

Suppose you are not satisfied with any of the historical or fantasy dramas out there lately where all kinds of slander, deception, and politicking...

Erol Degirmenci 2 March 2023

Left: Martin Droeshout, Portrait of William Shakespeare, 1623. Right: Titian, Tarquinius and Lucretia, ca. 1571, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK.

The Art of Ekphrasis: Shakespeare’s Lucrece

It is most common to talk about paintings or sculptures inspired by a piece of literature. Yet, this relationship between arts is not unidirectional.

Jimena Escoto 23 April 2024

Shakespeare in Art: Henry Fuseli, Titania and Bottom, c. 1790, Tate Britain, London, UK.

Shakespeare’s Plays in Art

“By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.” And indeed wicked it is! From Macbeth to Romeo and Juliet, William...

Ruxi Rusu 8 April 2024

best biography van gogh

Most Beautiful Qurans You Must See

Three monotheistic religions are the so-called “religions of the book”. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all refer back to a spoken, and...

Magda Michalska 13 November 2023

Never miss DailyArt Magazine's stories. Sign up and get your dose of art history delivered straight to your inbox!

Biography Online

Biography

Vincent Van Gogh Biography

Vincent Van Gogh (1853–1890)

Vincent Van Gogh was an artist of exceptional talent. Influenced by impressionist painters of the period, he developed his own instinctive, spontaneous style. Van Gogh became one of the most celebrated artists of the twentieth century and played a key role in the development of modern art.

“What am I in the eyes of most people — a nonentity, an eccentric, or an unpleasant person — somebody who has no position in society and will never have; in short, the lowest of the low. All right, then — even if that were absolutely true, then I should one day like to show by my work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart. That is my ambition, based less on resentment than on love in spite of everything, based more on a feeling of serenity than on passion.”

– Vincent Van Gogh (Letter to Theo, July 1882)

Short Biography Vincent Van Gogh

He was born in Groot-Zundert, a small town in Holland in March 1853. His father was a Protestant pastor and he had three uncles who were art dealers.

von gogh

Despite disliking formal training, he studied art in both Brussels and Paris. His first attempts at art were not indicative of his later talent. In the beginning, he was a clumsy drawer and, when studying at one art academy, he was put back a year because of his perceived lack of ability to draw. His early pictures appear rather basic and do not show any sign of his later art. However, he worked hard and sought to improve his technique. Yet these early difficulties always stayed with Van Gogh and throughout his life, he was bothered with a sense of inadequacy. In a letter to his brother, he described his early efforts as mere ‘scribbles.’

He became absorbed in art and would prioritise it over more mundane matters. Van Gogh struggled to hold down a regular job. For example, he lost his position as an art dealer after quarrelling with a customer. He also had short-lived jobs as a supply teacher and priest. Not holding a regular job, he relied on financial help from his close brother Theo. Theo was generous to his brother throughout his life – often sending money and painting materials.

With his brothers financial backing, in 1888 Van Gogh travelled to Arles in the south of France, where he continued his painting – often outside – another feature of the impressionist movement. This was a prolific period for Van Gogh; he could paint up to five paintings per week and he enjoyed walking in the countryside and getting inspiration from nature – such as the corn harvest. He drew everything from nature, portraits of friends, everyday objects and the vast night sky.

Vincent-Van-Gogh-Straw-Harvest-Oil-Painting-Free-I-6608

Straw Harvest

Living in Paris (1886-88) he had been influenced by the new impressionist painters, such as Monet and Renoir, and their interest in light. However, he soon developed his own unique style of powerful, brush strokes – often using warm reds, oranges and yellows. Simple brush strokes which created strong and arresting images.

Van Gogh was driven by an inner urge to express the art he felt within. He wrote that he felt an artistic power within, which moved him to work very hard.

“Believe me, I work, I drudge, I grind all day long and I do so with pleasure, but I should get very much discouraged if I could not go on working as hard or even harder.. .I feel, Theo, that there is a power within me, and I do what I can to bring it out and free it.”

– Van Gogh, (Letter to Theo 1982)

Van Gogh lived from moment to moment and was never financially secure. He put his whole life into art and neglected other aspects of his life – such as his health, appearance and financial security. During his lifetime, he sold only one painting – ironic since now Van Gogh’s paintings are some of the most expensive in the world.

“What is true is that I have at times earned my own crust of bread, and at other times a friend has given it to me out of the goodness of his heart. I have lived whatever way I could, for better or for worse, taking things just as they came.”

– Van Gogh, Letter to Theo ( July 1880 )

starry-night

Cafe Terrace at Night 1888 ( Kröller-Müller Museum)

“When I have a terrible need of — shall I say the word — religion. Then I go out and paint the stars.”

– Vincent Van Gogh

In Arles, he had a brief, if unsuccessful, period of time with the artist Gauguin. Van Gogh’s intensity and mental imbalance made him difficult to live with. At the end of the two weeks, Van Gogh approached Gauguin with a razor blade. Gauguin fled back to Paris, and Van Gogh later cut off the lower part of his ear with the blade.

This action was symptomatic of his increasing mental imbalance. He was later committed to a lunatic asylum where he would spend time on and off until his death in 1890. At the best of times, Van Gogh had an emotional intensity that flipped between madness and genius. He himself wrote:

“Sometimes moods of indescribable anguish, sometimes moments when the veil of time and fatality of circumstances seemed to be torn apart for an instant.”

sunflowers

Vase with 12 Sunflowers,  1888

It was during these last two years of his life that Van Gogh was at his most productive as a painter. He developed a style of painting that was quick and rapid – leaving no time for contemplation and thought. He painted with quick movements of the brush and drew increasingly avant-garde style shapes – foreshadowing modern art and its abstract style. He felt an overwhelming need and desire to paint.

“The work is an absolute necessity for me . I can’t put it off, I don’t care for anything but the work; that is to say, the pleasure in something else ceases at once and I become melancholy when I can’t go on with my work. Then I feel like a weaver who sees that his threads are tangled, and the pattern he had on the loom is gone to hell, and all his thought and exertion is lost.”

In 1890, a series of bad news affected his mental equilibrium and one day in July, whilst painting, he shot himself in the chest. He died two days later from his wound.

yellow-house

Yellow House

The religion of Vincent Van Gogh

Van Gogh was critical of formalised religion and was often scathing of clerics in the Christian church, but he denied he was an atheist, believing in God and love.

“That God of the clergymen, He is for me as dead as a doornail. But am I an atheist for all that? The clergymen consider me as such — be it so; but I love, and how could I feel love if I did not live, and if others did not live, and then, if we live, there is something mysterious in that.”

– Van Gogh

Van Gogh saw his painting as a spiritual pursuit. He wrote of great paintings, that the artist had hidden an aspect of God in the painting.

“Try to grasp the essence of what the great artists, the serious masters, say in their masterpieces, and you will again find God in them. One man has written or said it in a book, another in a painting.”
“I think that everything that is really good and beautiful, the inner, moral, spiritual and sublime beauty in men and their works, comes from God, and everything that is bad and evil in the works of men and in men is not from God, and God does not approve of it. But I cannot help thinking that the best way of knowing God is to love many things.”

– Vincent Van Gogh

Citation:  Pettinger, Tejvan . “Biography of Vincent Van Gogh”, Oxford,  www.biographyonline.net. Published 23 May 2014. Last Updated 3 February 2020.

Book Cover

Van Gogh – His Life and Works

Van Gogh: His Life & Works in 500 Images at Amazon

van gogh

Vincent Van Gogh – The Life

Vincent Van Gogh – The Life at Amazon

Related pages

art

Vincent van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh. Self-Portrait , 1887. Joseph Winterbotham Collection.

During Vincent van Gogh’s tumultuous career as a painter, he created a revolutionary style characterized by exaggerated forms, a vivid color palette, and loose, spontaneous handling of paint. Although he only actively pursued his art for five years before his death in 1890, his impact has lived on through his works.

In 1886 Van Gogh left his native Holland and settled in Paris, where his beloved brother, Theo, was a paintings dealer. In the two years he spent in Paris, Van Gogh painted no fewer than two dozen self-portraits. The Art Institute’s early, modestly sized example displays the bright palette he adopted with an overlay of small, even brushstrokes, a response to the Pointillist technique Georges Seurat used, most notably in A Sunday on La Grande Jatte—1884 . Works such as Fishing in Spring, the Pont de Clichy (Asnières) ; Grapes, Lemons, Pears, and Apples ; and Cypresses show the influence of the Impressionists.

Exhausted with the Parisian city life, Van Gogh moved on to the town of Arles in 1888. It was here that he created compositions of such personal importance that he repeated them several times, such as The Bedroom and Madame Roulin Rocking the Cradle (La berceuse) , with slight variations on each repetition.

After experiencing several bouts of mental illness, at the time diagnosed as epilepsy, Van Gogh was admitted to the Asylum of Saint Paul in Saint-Rémy. There he sketched and painted the grounds of the asylum and the town around him. On days when he was unable to go out, he copied works by other artists, such as The Drinkers , after a wood engraving of the same title by Honoré Daumier. 

Van Gogh spent the last few months of his life in Auvers-sur-Oise, a small town to the north of Paris. Here, he continued drawing and painting the town and those around him, capturing people, landscapes, houses, and flowers in his work until his untimely death. The Art Institute of Chicago has celebrated van Gogh’s path-breaking work in the exhibitions Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the South (2001–2002) and Van Gogh’s Bedrooms (2016).

  • The Bedroom, 1889 Vincent van Gogh
  • Self-Portrait, 1887 Vincent van Gogh
  • The Poet’s Garden, 1888 Vincent van Gogh
  • A Peasant Woman Digging in Front of Her Cottage, c. 1885 Vincent van Gogh
  • The Drinkers, 1890 Vincent van Gogh
  • Fishing in Spring, the Pont de Clichy (Asnières), 1887 Vincent van Gogh
  • Madame Roulin Rocking the Cradle (La berceuse), 1889 Vincent van Gogh
  • Terrace and Observation Deck at the Moulin de Blute-Fin, Montmartre, Early 1887 Vincent van Gogh
  • Grapes, Lemons, Pears, and Apples, 1887 Vincent van Gogh
  • Weeping Tree, 1889 Vincent van Gogh
  • Weeping Woman, 1883 Vincent van Gogh
  • Tetards (Pollards), 1884 Vincent van Gogh

Related Content

  • Article On the Wall of Van Gogh’s Bedroom

Throbbing with the hum of life, this garden is as inviting as the artist’s iconic bedroom. Curator Kevin Salatino tells us why.

  • Exhibition Closed Van Gogh’s Bedrooms Feb 14 – May 10, 2016
  • Exhibition Closed Van Gogh: In Search Of Feb 16 – May 9, 2016
  • Exhibition Closed Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the South Sep 22, 2001 – Jan 13, 2002
  • Exhibition Closed Cézanne to Picasso: Ambroise Vollard, Patron of the Avant-Garde Feb 17 – May 13, 2007
  • Exhibition Closed Toulouse-Lautrec and Montmartre Jul 16 – Oct 10, 2005
  • Print Publication Van Gogh’s Bedrooms
  • Print Publication Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the South
  • Exhibition Closed Van Gogh and the Avant-Garde: The Modern Landscape May 14 – Sep 4, 2023
  • Exhibition Closed Pure Drawing: Seven Centuries of Art from the Gray Collection Jan 25–Mar 13, 2020 | July 30–Oct 12, 2020

Explore Further

Related artworks.

  • A Roadside Tavern, 1863 Johan Barthold Jongkind
  • Entrance to the Port of Honfleur, 1863/64 Johan Barthold Jongkind
  • The Church of Overschie, 1866 Johan Barthold Jongkind
  • Wooded Landscape with Cottage and Horseman, 1663 Meindert Hobbema
  • Fishing Boats in a Calm, 1651 Jan van de Cappelle
  • Travellers Arriving at an Inn, 1630/40 Pieter De Neyn
  • The Rommel-Pot Player, c. 1630 Follower of Frans Hals
  • Christ Washing the Disciples’ Feet, c. 1630/35 Jan Lievens
  • Portrait of a Woman, c. 1655 Dutch School
  • Jacob’s Farewell to Benjamin, 1650/60 Follower of Rembrandt van Rijn
  • Portrait of a Young Girl, 1633/35 Pieter Dubordieu
  • Flowers in a Vase, c. 1750 Dutch School
  • Old Age, c. 1895 Jozef Israëls

Sign up for our enewsletter to receive updates.

  • News and Exhibitions Career Opportunities Families
  • Public Programs K-12 Educator Resources Teen Opportunities Research, Publishing, and Conservation
S M T W T F S

Gallery actions

Image actions, suggested terms.

  • Free Admission
  • O'Keeffe
  • My Museum Tour
  • What to See in an Hour

Biography of Vincent van Gogh (1890–1978)

Vincent van Gogh (1890–1978) was Vincent van Gogh’s nephew and the founder of the Van Gogh Museum.

'The engineer’

Vincent was the only child of Theo van Gogh and Jo Bonger. He was born in Paris on 31 January 1890 and named after his artist uncle.

He studied mechanical engineering at Delft University and worked as an engineer in France, the United States and Japan, before returning to the Netherlands in early 1920. Together with Ernst Hijmans, a friend from his student days, he set up a management consultancy – the first of its kind in the country.

To avoid confusion with his uncle’s name, he was often referred to as ‘the engineer’.

Foto van Ir. Vincent Willem van Gogh in het museum

Vincent 'The Engineer' van Gogh at the information desk in the Van Gogh Museum, 1976, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)

Following his mother’s death in 1925, Vincent assumed full responsibility for the collection of Van Gogh’s drawings, paintings and letters, and for the works of contemporaries that his uncle and father had collected.

It was important to him that the collection would remain intact and accessible after his death. That is why he established the Vincent van Gogh foundation and concluded an agreement with the State of the Netherlands. The State agreed to build the Van Gogh Museum and the municipality of Amsterdam made a piece of land on the Museumplein available. This way it was ensured that the collection is alwyas accessible to anyone.

The Rijksmuseum Vincent van Gogh opened its doors to the public on 3 June 1973. Vincent could be found at the museum most days until shortly before his death, and he devoted himself to everything related to his uncle Vincent, his father Theo and the museum.

Publication

The biography focuses on the different areas in which Vincent was active. Key themes include his background and motivation, his ideas about management consultancy, his activities in relation to the art collection, and the foundation and early years of the Van Gogh Museum.

The study draws on sources such as diaries, memoranda, annual reports, letters and family papers.

This PhD research contributes to our knowledge of the history of the Van Gogh Museum and the popularity of Vincent van Gogh's art.

The dissertation is being developed under the auspices of the Biography Institute of the University of Groningen and is supervised by Prof. Hans Renders and Dr. Peter de Ruiter.

Roelie Zwikker (Senior Researcher): [email protected]

best biography van gogh

5 Books About Vincent Van Gogh for His 165th Birthday

' src=

S.W. Sondheimer

When not prying Legos and gaming dice out of her feet, S.W. Sondheimer is a registered nurse at the Department of Therapeutic Misadventures, a herder of genetic descendants, cosplayer, and a fiction and (someday) comics writer. She is a Yinzer by way of New England and Oregon and lives in the glorious 'Burgh with her husband, 2 smaller people, 2 cats, a fish, and a snail. She occasionally tries to grow plants, drinks double-caffeine coffee, and has a habit of rooting for the underdog. It is possible she has a book/comic book problem but has no intention of doing anything about either. Twitter: @SWSondheimer

View All posts by S.W. Sondheimer

Born March 30th, 1853 in Zundert, The Netherlands, Vincent Van Gogh took his first breath in the wake of an impossible legacy, lived a tortured life, and died before he had an opportunity to see the world acknowledge his genius. For all of that, his 37 years have proven a gift to humanity and, in acknowledgment of his 165th birthday, I wanted to share his life, work, and words with all of you, with these books about Vincent Van Gogh.

Van Gogh: The Life  by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White-Smith

Now considered the definitive biography of Van Gogh, written in partnership with the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, Naifeh and White-Smith had access to materials no previous biographer had the opportunity to study. They have made the larger-than-life Vincent human and accessible without diminishing the historical and artistic presence of Van Gogh one whit.

Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brothers  by Deborah Heiligman

While I’ve understood the  concept of “creative non-fiction” intellectually for some time, I’ll admit I never quite understood how it could be successfully executed until reading Heiligman’s lovely, if tragic, biography of the Van Gogh brothers. Based on the letters between Vincent and Theo, Heiligman creates vignettes carefully grounded in the words of the men themselves while allowing for a certain amount of closely researched narrative. The effect is the literary equivalent to one of the moving photographs from Harry Potter and just as magical. Geared toward young adults, it’s an excellent introduction to the artists and his family while also being thoroughly engaging for adults with foreknowledge of the subject.

Vincent  by Barbara Stok

Though presented in graphic novel format, this account of Van Gogh’s time in Provence is frank and intense, covering subjects ranging from the artist’s battles with mental illness to his sometimes painfully obsessive relationships (both romantic and sexual), to his tumultuous interactions with fellow artists such as Paul Gaugin. Simple, gorgeous, and sometimes visually shocking, this is an affecting portrayal of Van Gogh that touched and surprised me, as well as, at one point, bringing me to tears. Proceed carefully if you’re particularly sensitive to color shifts and visual portrayal of mental illness.

Vincent Van Gogh: A Self-Portrait in Art and Letters  by H. Anna Suh

As she did with Da Vinci, Suh has chronologically matched Van Gogh’s paintings with snippets of his letters, allowing insight into what Vincent was thinking and feeling, and what was occurring in his life, as he created his works. The text and art are printed side by side, allowing the reader/viewer to experience them simultaneously, giving her the sensation of standing beside Vincent, or perhaps Theo, listening as the artist or his best beloved family member lectures on the genesis of each work. The book is oversized, which presents more detail in each of the lovely reproductions and a more intense viewing experience.

Van Gogh: The Complete Paintings  by Ingo F. Walther and Rainer Metzger

Few artists are as honest about their growing pains as Van Gogh was. He struggled to find his style and palette, craving recognition while, at the same time, expressing openly how much he still had to learn and how hard he worked to create. While some of his self-deprecation was certainly due to depression and anxiety, there is so much more to Vincent than his mental illness, as there is to all creators who wrestle with altered neurochemistry and circumstance, and paging through his work, through his progression, not only gives insight into the man himself, but hope to creators of all sorts.

So, happy birthday, Vincent. Though you’ll never know how much your work has meant to us, we will continue to celebrate it, and you.

[Ed. Note: The post has been fixed to reflect that it’s Van Gogh’s 165th birthday]

best biography van gogh

You Might Also Like

The Most Read Books on Goodreads This Week

Artble

Vincent van Gogh

  • Style and Technique
  • Critical Reception
  • Bedroom in Arles
  • Café Terrace at Night
  • Portrait d'Eugene Boch
  • Self-portrait with Straw Hat

Starry Night

  • Starry Night Over the Rhone
  • The Flowering Orchard

The Potato Eaters

Vincent Van Gogh Biography

Vincent van Gogh

  • Vincent Willem van Gogh
  • Short Name:
  • Date of Birth:
  • 30 Mar 1853
  • Date of Death:
  • 29 Jul 1890
  • Figure, Landscapes, Cityscapes, Scenery
  • Art Movement:
  • Post-Impressionism
  • Zundert, Netherlands
  • Vincent Van Gogh Biography Page's Content

Introduction

  • Early Years
  • Middle Years
  • Advanced Years

A key figure in the world of Post-impressionism Vincent Van Gogh also helped lay the foundations of modern art. A troubled man, he experienced many uncertainties and rejections in his early life, particularly where female love interests were concerned. Religion played a huge role in van Gogh´s life and many of his paintings carry religious undertones. Van Gogh did not experience great success during his lifetime, selling just one painting but after his death his work was revealed to the world and he is now regarded as one of the greatest artists that ever lived.

Vincent van Gogh Early Years

Becoming increasingly frustrated, Vincent ended his relationship with Hoomik and feeling uninspired, he moved back in with his parents to continue practicing his art. It was then that he was introduced to the paintings of Jean-Franqois Millet and he imitated Millets style a lot in his early works. Van Gogh had the desire to paint figures and in 1885 he completed The Potato Eaters which proved a success at the time. Believing he needed focused training in art techniques, van Gogh enrolled at The Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp and was impressed by the works of Rubens and various Japanese artists, and such influences would impact greatly on van Gogh's individual style. In 1886 Vincent van Gogh relocated to Paris and immersed himself in the world of Impressionism and Post-impressionism. He adopted brighter, more vibrant colors and began experimenting with his technique. He also spent time researching the styles found in the Japanese artwork he had discovered a year earlier. Paris exposed van Gogh to artists such as Gauguin, Pissarro, Monet, and Bernard. He befriended Paul Gauguin and moved to Arles in 1888 and Gauguin joined him later. Van Gogh started to paint sunflowers to decorate Gauguin's bedroom and this work of art would later become one of his most accomplished pieces, Sunflowers.

Vincent van Gogh Advanced Years

Starry Night

It was towards the end of 1888 that van Gogh's mental illness began to worsen and in one outburst he pursued Gauguin with a knife and threatened him. Later that day at home, Vincent cut off part of his own ear then offered it to a prostitute as a gift, and he was temporarily hospitalized. Upon returning home he found Gauguin leaving Arles, and thus his dream of setting up an art school was crushed. Van Gogh committed himself to an asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence at the end of 1888 and his paintings from his time there were brimming with activity. It was in the asylum that he painted Starry Night which became his most popular work and is one of the most influential pieces in history. Van Gogh left Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in 1890 and continued painting, producing a number of works - nearly one painting per day. Despite his creative achievements, the artist thought of his life as terribly wasted, and a personal failure. On July 27, 1890 he attempted suicide by shooting himself in the chest and died two days later from the wound, aged 37. Van Goghs dear brother Theo was devastated by his loss and died six months later. Theos widow took Vincent van Goghs works to Holland and published them, and he was an instant success. His work went on to influence Modernist art and today, Vincent van Gogh is regarded as one of history's greatest painters.

Is MasterClass right for me?

Take this quiz to find out.

Who Was Vincent van Gogh?: A Guide to Van Gogh’s Life and Art

Written by MasterClass

Last updated: Jun 7, 2021 • 5 min read

Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter whose work, most famously Starry Night , gained notoriety posthumously in the late twentieth century.

best biography van gogh

Get the Reddit app

Discussions on the life, works, and the influence of Vincent Van Gogh

What is the best biography on Van Gogh?

By continuing, you agree to our User Agreement and acknowledge that you understand the Privacy Policy .

Enter the 6-digit code from your authenticator app

You’ve set up two-factor authentication for this account.

Enter a 6-digit backup code

Create your username and password.

Reddit is anonymous, so your username is what you’ll go by here. Choose wisely—because once you get a name, you can’t change it.

Reset your password

Enter your email address or username and we’ll send you a link to reset your password

Check your inbox

An email with a link to reset your password was sent to the email address associated with your account

Choose a Reddit account to continue

CropManage Knowledge Base

Leonardo da Vinci Biography, Ways, Images, Mona Lisa, Pictures, Inventions, Victory, & Issues

  • August 18, 2024
  • Gerry Spinelli

Leading site | Writeup on the principles and features

General information about da vinci expensive diamonds slot.

Substitute an excellent solitary clip-on the new schedule having one of many exact same size. The “out” point of your own video you’re editing to the timeline usually be altered so it fits really well, making it an identical period while the you to it changes. After you do an enthusiastic overwrite, it can lay another clip on the new timeline in the precise location of the playhead, creating over any kind of video or video clips were there ahead of. Inserts a video to your schedule from the located area of the playhead and you may forces all else as a result of make room for it. If the new playhead is within the center away from a clip, it will broke up the new clip and set the new clip in the the center. Discover benefits trailing the new art during the Gamesville.com, where you could play for free.

  • The brand new Laser Dicing System is generally readily available for semiconductor straight back-stop processing; generally wafer dicing and you will scribing programs.
  • The brand new bettors are not required to perform a free account first off the game.
  • The overall game symbol symbol usually reward you that have a maximum of 5000 loans day bet for each and every range to own complimentary five icons.
  • The backdrop try dark-red, and the soundtrack is a lot like the ones that are inside the classic position servers.

Theoretically you can get possibly 3 hundred free spins nevertheless will most likely rating less than so it. Many people manage agree totally that Da Vinci Expensive diamonds of IGT is actually an excellent diamond motif position games. This is some other 5 reels slot you to definitely seems to be the new preferred setup nowadays. We could possibly along with advise that it’s a puzzle styled gambling enterprise position. There are a few other icons within the Divinci Diamonds Twin Gamble, and every you to caters to a function.

  • Tumbling reels is a wonderful function immediately after private to that game, basically they serves to incorporate a lot more opportunities to earn to your a solitary twist.
  • While the host takes a dip, you claimed’t find any inclusion as with various other games.
  • It really is a good option where to enjoy Da Vinci Expensive diamonds on the internet.
  • Yes, Divinci Diamonds Dual Gamble is available to experience the real deal money in the legitimate casinos on the internet which feature the video game inside their reception.
  • Da Vinci Diamonds Keno comes with more extra have than ever before having multipliers as much as 6X and you will a free games bonus that have dropping treasures one award more pulls.

Domme from Egypt Diamond Spins

The fresh RTP you to Da Vinci Expensive diamonds offer is actually the typical RTP for video slots, during the 96.37%. The video game has a medium to help you higher volatility, having a low to average struck frequency. While the term indicates, Da Vinci Diamonds try packed laden with jewels. For individuals who belongings around three of them to the a good payline, you’ll discover fourfold your stake. The brand new Triple Double Da Vinci Expensive diamonds online position is made by the High 5 Online game. The business are centered inside the 1995 and contains as the end up being one of the greatest game organization in the business.

leading site

Available thru browser otherwise local casino programs both for Android and new iphone 4, Da Vinci Expensive diamonds means well to help you mobile and you may tablet devices. Da Vinci Diamonds features lowest-to-medium volatility, which means payouts occurs usually, however, they are usually perhaps not lifetime-switching number. Sure, you’ll find similar ports in order to Da Vinci Expensive diamonds including the Van Gogh position created by Relax Betting. The fresh gaming really worth to own Da Vinci Expensive diamonds selections out of $1 so you can a total of $one hundred for each and every line.

They are a perpetual calendar, which displays the fresh time and you will week in two high twice-digit screens from the step three and 9 o’clock, correspondingly. An excellent mint-position watch within the rose otherwise white gold can cost you around 23,000 USD. If you want the newest precious metal edition, definitely have no less than 33,five hundred USD on hand. Quartz patterns using this period of time require a much reduced investment. You can purchase a great pre-owned Da Vinci Chronograph Quartz ref. IW3728 in the stainless on the Jaeger-LeCoultre caliber 630 for only dos,700 USD.

The higher your choice, the higher the newest award your’ll rating after you victory, so keep you to definitely planned once you place your own money really worth. That have a name such Da Vinci Diamonds, we offer a good visually exciting position with a few away from Leonardo Da Vinci’s better functions looked to your reels. IGT ‘s the label at the rear of the game, which have five reels and you may 40 paylines. For the playing field symbols which have collected a combination, decrease, as well as in the lay are available brand new ones.

Playing Da Vinci Expensive diamonds is actually an interesting experience because of its simple but really charming mechanics. An optimum jackpot win from twenty five,000 coins from IGT’s Da Vinci Diamonds position is certainly unbelievable, however, pales when compared to other ports. Particularly the multiple-million winnings of progressive position video game such Microgaming’s Super Moolah, a potential earn away from twenty five,one hundred thousand credit is generally as well lower for most players. The new wild symbol is easy to recognize, because states ‘Wild’ inside it, and you may around three scatter signs trigger the brand new 100 percent free Spins element. Addititionally there is a Tumbling Reels element offering the possibility in the consecutive gains from one spin of your reels.

leading site

There are also some added bonus have and icons discover to simply help improve your probability of profitable. What’s the objective of playing a slot games for many just who wear’t are able to secure higher, are I correct? Thankfully, Da Vinci Expensive diamonds Masterworks ‘s got the wrapped in 31 paylines.

This proves you the paytable as well as the worth of the individual cards, but in addition the instructions section. The rules try vital-comprehend one which just play Da leading site Vinci Diamond Dual Gamble slot to possess 100 percent free, as its specific niche is actually unconventional. Da Vinci Expensive diamonds Dual Enjoy can be found to experience at the VegasSlotsOnline free of charge. Because if the brand new Tumbling Reels aren’t adequate, IGT added another pleasant function entitled Tumble Via.

And options to earn, making it type of position plan expand within the dominance one of IGT local casino bettors. It’s nonetheless effort to locate some very nice payouts right here but no less than an opportunity is here which can focus the old college or university people who require one thing a small other. However, i are convinced that really will go directly to the newest NetEnt Gonzo’s Journey slot. Which could not have as much pay-outlines, but is much nicer and contains simpler and grand gains. So it property continues until not winning compositions are shaped.

leading site

The newest slot are modified on the vertical cellular phone/pill screen and you will will make it no problem to experience which have enjoyable. Since the 94.9% RTP might not be the highest, the newest game’s book attraction over accounts for because of it. We had been excitedly looking forward to another award combination one perfectly matched graphic which have bright gemstones. DaVinci Expensive diamonds – a position that truly life up to their namesake’s reputation for invention and beauty. Comprehend lower than to own details about the their features that may naturally surprise your.

Even though this games is quite an easy task to collect, 100 percent free gamble form lets you possess has yourself as opposed to any real cash risk. A distinct benefit to playing so it adaptation is the limitless financial harmony refills, you can keep to play unless you’re also prepared to generate a bona fide money deposit. Should you choose in the end make it happen even though, which you’ll rationally anticipate to capture a few training, you’lso are set for a goody. You to definitely short thing i have on the video game is that creating a plus bullet means not just landing three Incentive icons, however, lining them on a valid payline. Obviously, so it isn’t the easiest action to take (such as that have those individuals tumbling reels blend anything right up). This can lead to particular very big victories, especially if the Tumbling Reels ability work on the player’s choose.

Such, a video slot for example Da Vinci Expensive diamonds with 94.94 % RTP pays right back 94.94 cent for each and every €1. Since this is not uniformly distributed across the professionals, it gives the chance to victory higher cash amounts and you will jackpots for the even small dumps. Looking for a safe and reliable real cash gambling establishment to play from the? Here are some our directory of the best real cash online casinos right here. DaVinci Expensive diamonds slot are a product from IGT (Around the world Games Technology) online casino games. We understand IGT really, it’s among the “giants” inside globe.

leading site

That it position is usually confused with the fresh totally free Triple Diamond position because the they are both jewel-themed with jackpot and you will free spins. The fresh Davinci Diamonds casino slot games is just one of the profitable IGT video game. It’s well-known not only in online casinos as well as property platforms.

Since the term implies, gems enjoy a vital role in this slot, that have rubies, emeralds, and you will pomegranate rocks becoming the low-investing icons. The greater-paying symbols function Da Vinci’s art works plus the Da Vinci Expensive diamonds image. We recently grabbed a social travel because of IGT’s DaVinci Diamonds position, and it’s really safe to state we have been still within the wonder. The fresh designers managed to mix ways history which have progressive position technicians. If you are looking at the online game, we met the newest secretive Mona Lisa by herself, marveled from the potential for to 3 hundred free video game and you will chased the fresh desire a great 5000x max winnings. We’ve gathered the newest table less than to display the bet multipliers per of your Expensive diamonds by the Da Vinci video slot’s symbols.

While many of them slots are slightly unsatisfactory attempts to merely duplicate the newest IGT slot, there are several, Da Vinci inspired and you will otherwise, that are yes value mention. The fresh Da Vinci Diamonds extra round will come in when around three Incentive symbols is actually got on the a good payline. It commences the fresh Totally free Revolves Bonus round, on the quantity of free revolves are contingent to your amounts away from Incentive signs that seem. The new bullet provides the possibility to gather additional spins, susceptible to certain restrictions. Because you venture into the new depths of your own Da Vinci Diamonds slot machine online, you’ll find a variety of signs, per offering novel payouts.

leading site

In the case of DaVinci Diamonds online slot, the full quantity of bonus series are Letter/A great, an average incentive earn try N/A great, and also the added bonus regularity rates is Letter/A good. As mentioned, it will be the tumbling reels providing you with Da Vinci Expensive diamonds a various other be for other video harbors. The fresh icons seem to lose near the top of each other and you can and then make a sound for example clinking a cup as they home.

They are tourbillon observe, flyback chronographs, and you may watches with a continuous diary. Gamble Da Vinci Diamond on line totally free harbors zero download zero membership because they’re entirely suitable for cellphones powered by Screen, Android, and you can ios systems. To be sure the smooth running of one’s cellular software, set up Adobe Flash Player or opt for the fresh HTML 5 adaptation of one’s online game. Gamblers may make use of the Automobile Twist feature, and that brings 10, 20, 31, 40, and you will fifty options. The online game is capable of to play as numerous revolves as the a person chooses.

At that time, they didn’t admit the task while the a decorating because of the Leonardo da Vinci. The newest investors got the job in order to renowned art restorer Dianne Modestini, whom oversaw the help’s reconstruction and then stripped the newest overpainting and you may occupied inside the lost pieces. Inside paint’s fix, Modestini and its particular buyers turned confident the job is actually because of the Leonardo da Vinci. The fresh painting are subjected to numerous years of lookup and you can research before it actually was included as the a missing out on brand-new inside a Leonardo exhibition during the London’s Federal Gallery in 2011.

leading site

Inside 1503, da Vinci and already been focus on the newest “Battle of Anghiari,” a great mural commissioned to the council hall from the Palazzo Vecchio which had been getting two times as higher because the “The final Supper.” If your Giocondo family performed actually commission the brand new decorate, it never ever obtained it. To own da Vinci, the brand new “Mona Lisa” is forever a-work happening, because it is their test in the brilliance, and he never parted to the painting. Now, the fresh “Mona Lisa” hangs on the Louvre Museum inside the Paris, France, protected trailing bulletproof glass and considered to be an invaluable federal appreciate seen because of the millions of group yearly. His very first recognized old work — a pencil-and-ink drawing from a land regarding the Arno area — try sketched inside the 1473. Whether you’re trying to find a spherical wise, a great minds and arrows otherwise a Da Vinci diamond, contact us and we will be happy to help you in in whatever way we can be.

IMAGES

  1. Vincent Van Gogh Biography: The Sad Story of His Life and His Amazing Art

    best biography van gogh

  2. Vincent van Gogh 101

    best biography van gogh

  3. Vincent van Gogh

    best biography van gogh

  4. Vincent van Gogh

    best biography van gogh

  5. Vincent Van Gogh Biography

    best biography van gogh

  6. 7 Facts About Vincent van Gogh

    best biography van gogh

COMMENTS

  1. An expert's guide to Vincent van Gogh: the five best books on the Dutch

    All you ever needed to know about the artist, from the story of the ear incident to the definitive biography and best picture book—selected by Van Gogh specialist Martin Bailey José da Silva 10 ...

  2. Vincent van Gogh

    Vincent Willem van Gogh (Dutch: [ˈvɪnsɛnt ˈʋɪləɱ‿vɑŋ‿ˈɣɔx] ⓘ; [note 1] 30 March 1853 - 29 July 1890) was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter who is among the most famous and influential figures in the history of Western art. In just over a decade, he created approximately 2100 artworks, including around 860 oil paintings, most of them in the last two years of his life.

  3. Vincent van Gogh

    Both Van Gogh brothers played a central role in the history of late 19th-century art and ended up dying tragically, within months of one another. t gives the reader a feel for Western Europe in the 1870s and 1880s, for the countryside and vibrant art scene that inspired the brothers. It builds into a full biography of Van Gogh and his cohort.

  4. Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890)

    Van Gogh in Arles. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1984. See on MetPublications. Pickvance, Ronald. Van Gogh in Saint-Rémy and Auvers. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986. See on MetPublications. Selected and edited by Ronald de Leeuw. The Letters of Vincent van Gogh. London: Penguin, 2006. Stein, Susan Alyson, ed. Van Gogh: A ...

  5. Vincent van Gogh

    Some of van Gogh's most famous works include "Starry Night," "Irises," and "Sunflowers." In a moment of instability, Vincent Van Gogh cut off his ear and offered it to a prostitute. Van Gogh died ...

  6. Vincent van Gogh

    Vincent van Gogh (born March 30, 1853, Zundert, Netherlands—died July 29, 1890, Auvers-sur-Oise, near Paris, France) was a Dutch painter, generally considered the greatest after Rembrandt van Rijn, and one of the greatest of the Post-Impressionists.The striking color, emphatic brushwork, and contoured forms of his work powerfully influenced the current of Expressionism in modern art.

  7. Van Gogh: The Life Paperback

    "The definitive biography for decades to come." —Leo Jansen, curator, the Van Gogh Museum, and co-editor of Vincent van Gogh: The Complete Letters "In their magisterial new biography, Van Gogh: The Life, Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith provide a guided tour through the personal world and work of that Dutch painter, shining a bright light on the evolution of his art. . . .

  8. Vincent van Gogh Paintings, Bio, Ideas

    The majority of Van Gogh's best-known works were produced during the final two years of his life. During the fall and winter of 1888, Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin lived and worked together in Arles in the south of France, where Van Gogh eventually rented four rooms at 2 Place Lamartine, which was dubbed the "Yellow House" for its citron hue.

  9. Vincent's Life, 1853-1890

    Vincent van Gogh had many different jobs before he decided to become an artist at the age of 27. That decision would change art history forever. Read his biography. {{pageTransitionStateText}} Cookies for the best experience. We use cookies to offer you the best possible website experience. Functional and analytical cookies ensure proper ...

  10. Vincent van Gogh

    For Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), the answer was clear: color. "What I'm most passionate about, much much more than all the rest in my profession," he enthused to his sister, Willemien, "is the portrait, the modern portrait. I seek it by way of color." 1 With its vivid palette, spirited handling, and exuberant background, Portrait ...

  11. Vincent van Gogh Biography & Facts: Paintings, Starry Night, and

    Originally, van Gogh had painted seven Sunflowers in Arles, but one was destroyed in a fire during World War II, and another was lost after it was sold into a private collection. 4. Historians ...

  12. Vincent van Gogh

    Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) is world-famous. Learn about Van Gogh's life, read his letters, explore his paintings and drawings, and other masterpieces. {{pageTransitionStateText}} Cookies for the best experience. We use cookies to offer you the best possible website experience. Functional and analytical cookies ensure proper functionality ...

  13. 'Van Gogh: The Life,' by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith

    The Life. By Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith. Illustrated. 953 pages. Random House. $40. Follow Michiko Kakutani on Twitter: @michikokakutani. A version of this article appears in print on ...

  14. Vincent van Gogh

    Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) was a Dutch post-impressionist artist whose paintings are amongst the most popular and recognizable in history. His dramatic brushwork, exuberant palette, and mastery at capturing moments in time and light revolutionised art. Only recognised at the end of his life, his struggles and triumphs have coloured exactly what we imagine it is to be an artist.

  15. Vincent van Gogh: Life of the Post-Impressionist Master

    Vincent van Gogh. The Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh is one of the most influential figures not only in the area of Post-Impressionism but in the whole Western art history. During his lifetime, he was commercially unsuccessful and considered a madman. He suffered intense psychological breakdowns and in 1890, he committed suicide at the age of 37.

  16. Van Gogh: The Life Hardcover

    "The definitive biography for decades to come."—Leo Jansen, curator, the Van Gogh Museum, and co-editor of Vincent van Gogh: The Complete Letters "In their magisterial new biography, Van Gogh: The Life, Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith provide a guided tour through the personal world and work of that Dutch painter, shining a bright light on the evolution of his art. . . . What ...

  17. 5 Books About Van Gogh You Have to Read

    5. Van Gogh: The Life. Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith cooperated closely with the Van Gogh Museum for this book. Van Gogh: The Life brings to light previously unknown information about the artist's life, his relationship with his brother Theo, and the mysterious circumstances under which he committed suicide. In addition, the book is a New York Times bestseller and nominated one of ...

  18. Vincent Van Gogh Biography

    Short Biography Vincent Van Gogh. He was born in Groot-Zundert, a small town in Holland in March 1853. His father was a Protestant pastor and he had three uncles who were art dealers. His early life seems generally to be unhappy, after a period of working in his uncle's art dealership, he became frustrated and so became a Protestant minister.

  19. Vincent van Gogh

    Van Gogh spent the last few months of his life in Auvers-sur-Oise, a small town to the north of Paris. Here, he continued drawing and painting the town and those around him, capturing people, landscapes, houses, and flowers in his work until his untimely death. The Art Institute of Chicago has celebrated van Gogh's path-breaking work in the ...

  20. Biography of Vincent van Gogh (1890-1978)

    Vincent was the only child of Theo van Gogh and Jo Bonger. He was born in Paris on 31 January 1890 and named after his artist uncle. He studied mechanical engineering at Delft University and worked as an engineer in France, the United States and Japan, before returning to the Netherlands in early 1920. Together with Ernst Hijmans, a friend from ...

  21. 5 Books About Vincent Van Gogh for His 165th Birthday

    Van Gogh: The Life by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White-Smith Now considered the definitive biography of Van Gogh, written in partnership with the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, Naifeh and White-Smith had access to materials no previous biographer had the opportunity to study. They have made the larger-than-life Vincent human and accessible without diminishing the historical and artistic presence ...

  22. Vincent Van Gogh Biography

    Vinc&egr avzzz;nt van Gogh was born in Holland in 1853 and was one of six children born to Anna Cornelia Carbentus and Reverend Theodorus van Gogh, a protestant minister. A quiet and serious child, van Gogh showed no real interest in art. At the age of 16, he found a job at the Hague gallery, run by French art dealers Goupil et Cie.

  23. Who Was Vincent van Gogh?: A Guide to Van Gogh's Life and Art

    A Guide to Van Gogh's Life and Art - 2024 - MasterClass. Arts & Entertainment. Who Was Vincent van Gogh?: A Guide to Van Gogh's Life and Art. Written by MasterClass. Last updated: Jun 7, 2021 • 5 min read. Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter whose work, most famously Starry Night, gained notoriety posthumously in the late ...

  24. What is the best biography on Van Gogh? : r/vangogh

    What is the best biography on Van Gogh? Van Goghs Ear, The true story by Bernadette Murphy is a good read. Only covers his time in Arles but it's very interesting. I highly recommend Van Gogh: The Life by Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith.

  25. Van Gogh didn't die a neglected genius

    Van Gogh's considered, strategically-minded side is, says Homburg, still "overlooked". The received wisdom that he was a perennial failure while he was alive is easily debunked.

  26. Vincent Van Gogh's most famous paintings (and where to see them ...

    Vincent Van Gogh's 5 most beautiful paintings. The Starry Night (1888), Musée d'Orsay, Paris. The Starry Night is one of the many stages in Vincent van Gogh 's obsessive quest to represent ...

  27. Leonardo da Vinci Biography, Ways, Images, Mona Lisa, Pictures

    Da Vinci Diamonds features lowest-to-medium volatility, which means payouts occurs usually, however, they are usually perhaps not lifetime-switching number. Sure, you'll find similar ports in order to Da Vinci Expensive diamonds including the Van Gogh position created by Relax Betting.