Rosas / Vaso com Rosas (Roses / Vase with Pink Roses) - Vincent van Gogh
National Gallery of Art Washington D.C. Estados Unidos
OST - 71x90 - 1890
Roses was
painted shortly before Van Gogh's release from the asylum at Saint–Rémy. He
felt he was coming to terms with his illness—and himself. In this healing
process, painting was all–important. During those final three weeks of his
recovery, he wrote his brother Theo, he had "worked as in a frenzy. Great
bunches of flowers, violet irises, big bouquets of roses..."
This is one of
two rose paintings Van Gogh made at that time. It is among his largest and most
beautiful still lifes, with an exuberant bouquet in the glory of full bloom.
Although he sometimes assigned certain meanings to flowers, Van Gogh did not
make a specific association for roses. It is clear, though, that he saw all
blossoming plants as celebrations of birth and renewal—as full of life. That
sense is underscored here by the fresh spring green of the background. The
undulating ribbons of paint, applied in diagonal strokes, animate the canvas
and play off the furled forms of flowers and leaves. Originally, the roses were
pink—the color has faded—and would have created a contrast of complementary
colors with the green. Such combinations of complements fascinated Van Gogh.
The paint is very thick—so thick that both rose paintings were left behind when
Van Gogh left Saint–Rémy on May 16, 1890. As he explained to Theo, "these
canvases will take a whole month to dry, but the attendant here will undertake
to send them off after my departure." They arrived in Auvers by June 24.
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