Weather Tonight: 4°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 8°c Cloudy

News

Van Gogh
The Bedroom (1888), one of Van Gogh’s best-known works
Van Gogh Van Gogh

New show of Van Gogh letters lays bare his troubled genius

Robert Fox, in Amsterdam
7 Oct 2009


At times in his short life Vincent Van Gogh could hardly give away his pictures, let alone sell them.

Now one of the world's favourite painters - with his Sunflowers, Irises, and radiant wheat fields selling for millions, and selling by the million in reproduction - Van Gogh today conquers new literary heights with the publication of 902 letters in a major new show, The Artist Speaks, in Amsterdam.

It will come to London to be the major spring show at the Royal Academy from 27 January.

In the letters, which track his career from the dour flatlands of his native Holland to just a few days before he shot himself at the age of just 37 at Auvers sur Oise in France in July 1890, Van Gogh tells all.

It is a journey through rejection and madness to the great paintings of burning stars, flickering cypresses and the stark vibrant colours of Arles.

In a couple of letters he also mentions his life in London and includes sketches of houses in Isleworth, where he taught at a school in 1876.

It has taken more than 15 years to edit the correspondence into the new edition. It will be available in sumptuous book form in six volumes, with the English version selling for a cool £325.

However the Van Gogh museum will put the lot online for free from tonight. All two million words of texts and notes and more than 2,000 reproductions of his drawings and paintings will be available at the addresses below. "What we get is a view of the enormous storehouse of his mind and imagination," said Leo Jansen, one of the architects of the collection.

Two years before the end, Van Gogh had himself admitted to the asylum at the cloister of Saint Remy. "Through the iron barred window, I can see a square of wheat," he wrote to his brother Theo on 23 May 1889, "a perspective in which alone in the morning I see the sun rise in glory."

Philip Watson, who has edited the British version for Thames and Hudson, said: "They match the letters of Byron and Keats and Wilde in their power and directness. He is completely self aware - he knows what is happening to him, and he is not a raving madman."

Jansen added: "There is something completely thought out about the way he thinks about his art, every brush stroke is deliberate and planned. This is not the work of a madman slashing at the canvas with a frenzy of paint."

The London show will have more paintings and sketches, fewer of the letters. It will, however, be the biggest international collection of Van Gogh's work for 40 years.

But the new glory is in the letters. Jansen said: "They are almost a new form - the sketch letter, as he carefully lays out his thoughts on his pictures and his art."

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Riot axeman terror at McDonald's Axe man A rioter who terrorised diners with an axe at McDonald's has been jailed for five years and three months - one of the toughest sentences for...
  • Terror of boy exposed as gang witness Scotland Yard A boy and his family had to flee their London home after a blunder by the Met and Crown Prosecution Service gave his name to gang members he...
  • Mayor of poverty-hit council hires adviser in £1,000-a-day deal Lutfur Rahman Winterbottom One of the poorest boroughs in London is under fire for spending £1,000 a day on a personal aide for its mayor
  • Hyde Park mega-concerts at risk after neighbours complain about the noise Hyde park crowd Major music concerts in Hyde Park could be axed because Westminster council believes they are too noisy
  • Soho 'field hospital' for drunks reopens David Cameron smile A field hospital set up to deal with London's drunks is being extended as the binge-drinking crisis deepens in the capital
  • Jobless total jumps by 48,000 with UK facing 'zig-zag year' Job Centre unemployment Bank of England Governor Sir Mervyn King warned Britain faces a "zig-zag" year of growth and gloom today as unemployment rose by 48,000
  • Greens and Ukip could test Paddick in fight for mayor poll third place Paddick Brian Paddick could struggle even to finish third in this year's mayoral election, as smaller parties look set to capitalise on Lib-Dem woes...
  • Phone-hack private eye can appeal over human rights ruling Glenn Mulcaire The private investigator at the centre of the phone hacking scandal was today granted the right by the Supreme Court to appeal against a...
  • Britain's athletes could be banned from 2012 for criticising the team Olympic site British athletes risk being banned from the Olympics if they criticise team-mates or sponsors under rules that cover tattoos, contact lenses...
  • Teenager who dreamt of being a judge stabbed 24 times in 45 seconds Three thugs are facing life sentences for stabbing a teenager who had dreams of being a judge 24 times in 45 seconds in front of horrified bus passengers
  •  

    Don't Miss
    • London Gateway

      Supersize superport: London Gateway

      London Gateway, the £1.5bn container port under construction on the Thames at Thurrock, will have capacity to unload six of the world's largest ships at one time and have as much impact on the capital as a new airport or half a dozen Westfield shopping centres
    • Matthew Williamson

      One stylish affair: Matthew Williamson

      With London Fashion Week kicking off on Friday, British designer Matthew Williamson tells Rosamund Urwin about breaking up with his ex, post-show partying and his new model man