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Swiss show van Gogh's landscapes in major exhibit
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BASEL, Switzerland,—Vincent
van Gogh preferred painting portraits and figures, but it
was his landscapes that sparked a revolution in art.
Seventy landscapes, among them key works never seen by wide
audiences, are presented in an ambitious show at Basel's
distinguished Kunstmuseum. It is billed as "Europe's art event of
the year."
The exhibition "Vincent van Gogh Between Earth and Heaven" focuses
for the first time exclusively on his landscapes, the most frequent
motif in his work. Organizers expect more than half a million
visitors before the exhibition ends Sept. 27.
Lenders include museums in the United States, Japan, Israel and
seven European countries as well as several private collectors.
Kunstmuseum director Bernhard Mendes Buergi, who is also one of the
curators, said it was "quite extraordinary that they were permitted
to travel to Basel."
The combined insurance value of the works is given at more than $2
billion. Premiums and the cost of mounting the exhibition are
certain to be correspondingly high.
Buergi said the project would not have been possible without its
sponsor, UBS, the largest Swiss bank. UBS has since become a top
victim of the financial crisis and is getting substantial survival
subsidies from the government.
The show covers all phases of
van Gogh's landscape art. The
pieces mirror the continuous shifts in his mental state, alternating
between moments of hope and fits of self-doubt and despair that
eventually drove him to suicide at 37.
"Van Gogh was an
artist who shaped himself by destroying himself," Gottfried Boehm, a
prominent Swiss art historian, writes in the exhibition catalog,
citing excessive drinking combined with equally excessive zeal to
reach van Gogh's "artistic goal of maximizing the evocative power of
color."
Somber tones dominate the paintings of his early years. Even the
first one on view at Basel, "Flower Beds in Holland," dated April
1883, radiates a dusky atmosphere despite blue skies. Visitors get a
similar impression from a picture van Gogh did the next year of the
tower church where his father, a Calvinist pastor, gave the Sunday
sermons.
His brother Theo, an art dealer in Paris who financially supported
the artist throughout his life, talked him into dropping such a
darkening approach if he wanted to become a respected modern artist.
In 1880, van Gogh joined his brother in Paris, where Theo put him in
touch with Claude Monet and other successful impressionists. The two
years he stayed in the French capital brought a profound change in
his work, a brightened palette and a different technique.
Particularly striking to viewers is a multicolored picture of a
"Fourteenth of July Celebration" reflecting a radically bold
brushwork.
In exchange for regular financial support, Theo received all
landscapes. Vincent repeatedly made plain that he liked painting
figures more than landscapes but Theo presumably thought the latter
would sell better.
Van Gogh's bias vanished after he ended his stay in Paris early in
1888 and moved to Arles, in the South of France, where a bright
spring sun soon intensified the color in his paintings. On view are
spectacular samples of that new approach, among them a series of
wheat field and harvest pictures.
A sudden change in his mental state, which had never been stable
since his youth, resulted in a 1888 Christmas Eve crisis in which he
cut off part of his earlobe. A self-portrait showing him with the
bandaged head is reproduced in the exhibition catalog.
Attesting to his relapse into depression is the last of 20 Arles
pictures, "Landscape Under Stormy Sky," with ominously threatening
clouds. He painted it in May 1889 only a few days before committing
himself into an asylum at Saint-Remy, where farmers called him a
"crazy redhead."
The transfer marked what many consider the peak of his career.
Outstanding among the works he did there are the swirling
"Cypresses," on loan from the Metropolitan Museum. He did the
painting from the window of his room where he was confined for
several months.
After a new relapse, his brother talked him into leaving Saint-Remy
and seeking the treatment of a homeopath, Dr. Paul Gachet in the
village of Auvers north of Paris. It was there that van Gogh's
output reached an unprecedented feverish pace—75 paintings within 70
days. Ten of them, all landscapes, are on view, the last depicting
swirling wheat stacks, painted just days before van Gogh shot
himself in the chest. He died two days later on July 29, 1890.
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