Starry Night
Vincent van Gogh, The Starry
Night, 1889. Oil on canvas.
Today, Vincent van Gogh stands as one of the most celebrated artists of the nineteenth century, and his painting, The Starry Night, completed in 1889, is not only one of his most famous works, but also one of the most famous paintings in the world. Yet van Gogh and his beloved painting were not always as famous as they are today. And even today, few people know a great deal about his artistic process. Most are satisfied to know his name and vague 'facts' about his mental health
Despite having
gained a small measure of acclaim in the two years preceding his death, van
Gogh lived most of his life in obscurity. Born in the Netherlands in 1853, van
Gogh had been interested in art from a young age and worked as an art dealer
for a few years in his early adulthood. However, he spent much of his
adult life working in various professions before finally beginning his
artistic career in 1880 when he enrolled in classes at the Academia Royale des
Beaux-Arts in Brussels.
Though van Gogh only worked as an artist
for a decade, he still produced more than 850 paintings and close to 1,300
drawings, sketches, and other works on paper. Yet, despite this large body of
work, he only sold a handful of works before his death by suicide in
1890, when he was thirty-seven years old.
Vincent van Gogh, Starry Night
(Over the Rhône), 1888. Oil on canvas.
After his death,
van Gogh’s collection was left to his art-dealer brother, Theo, who had
financially supported him. Theo intended to promote his elder brother’s work
after Vincent’s death, but he died just six months after his brother.
It was Theo’s
widow, Jo van Gogh-Banger—who inherited Vincent’s works and the letters the
brothers had written to each other—who would successfully build Vincent van
Gogh’s posthumous fame. In addition to publishing the brothers’ letters, van
Gogh-banger loaned some of her brother-in-law’s paintings to museums for
exhibitions while selling others—including The Starry Night.
Vincent van Gogh painted The Starry Night in 1889 while he was staying in Saint-Paul asylum in Saint-Remy, France, where he lived for a year following a breakdown and the mutilation of his left ear. Painted with oil on canvas, the artist attempted to capture the view from the window in his room. The Monastery of Saint-Paul de Mau sole
On the
inspiration for The Starry Night, van Gogh wrote to Theo, “This
morning I saw the countryside from my window a long time before sunrise, with
nothing but the morning star, which looked very big.”
Though the
painter preferred working from observation, he was not allowed to paint in his
room, so he began painting the star he had seen in his studio without the view
for reference, applying paint to the canvas directly from the tubes to create
the image’s iconic thick lines and intense colors. The result was the
dream-like image, which features wavy cypress trees in the foreground and
glowing stars, a bright crescent moon, a swirling sky, rolling hills, and a
village in the background. Some of the elements, such as the mountains in the
distance and the existence of the village are true to the view van Gogh would
have seen from his window. Meanwhile, other parts, such as the steeple on the
church, are imagined.
While van
Gogh painted the same view several times with each interpretation
appearing different than the last, it is this celestial-inspired image that has
captivated viewers for nearly a century.
Upon its completion, van Gogh actually
believed the painting to be a failure. He wrote to Theo, "All in all the
only things I consider a little good in it are the Wheatfield, the Mountain,
the Orchard, the Olive trees with the blue hills and the Portrait and the
Entrance to the quarry, and the rest says nothing to me."
Vincent van Gogh, Green Wheat
Field with Cypress, 1889. Oil on canvas.
Created only a
year before his death, The Starry Night is one of the
paintings Jo van Gogh-banger inherited from her husband.
She sold it to
poet Julien Leclerc, who then sold it to artist Claude-Emile before van Gogh-banger
reacquired it and sent it to the Olden eel Gallery in Rotterdam. The painting
was then sold to Georgette P. van Stalk and then the Paul Rosenberg Gallery,
from which the Museum of Modern Art in New York acquired the work in
1941, where it has been housed since. In order to purchase the painting, the
MoMA sold three paintings from the collection of Lillie P. Bliss—one of the
museum’s founders—which was left to the museum after her death.
Since the MoMA’s acquisition of the
painting, viewers have been transfixed by van Gogh’s interpretation of the
nighttime view from his window in Saint-Remy, and The Starry Night now stands as one of the most famous works of Western
art.


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