Autorretrato (Self-Portrait) - Vincent van Gogh
The Art Institute of Chicago, Estados Unidos
Óleo montado em painel - 41x32 - 1887
In 1886
Vincent van Gogh left his native Holland and settled in Paris, where his
beloved brother Theo was a dealer in paintings. Van Gogh created at least
twenty-four self-portraits during his two-year stay in the energetic French
capital. This early example is modest in size and was painted on prepared
artist’s board rather than canvas. Its densely dabbed brushwork, which became a
hallmark of Van Gogh’s style, reflects the artist’s response to Georges Seurat’s
revolutionary pointillist technique in A Sunday
on La Grande Jatte—1884. But what was for Seurat a method based on
the cool objectivity of science became in Van Gogh’s hands an intense emotional
language. The surface of the painting dances with particles of color—intense
greens, blues, reds, and oranges. Dominating this dazzling array of staccato
dots and dashes are the artist’s deep green eyes and the intensity of their
gaze. “I prefer painting people’s eyes to cathedrals,” Van Gogh once wrote to
Theo. “However solemn and imposing the latter may be—a human soul, be it that
of a poor streetwalker, is more interesting to me.” From Paris, Van Gogh
traveled to the southern town of Arles for fifteen months. At the time of his
death, in 1890, he had actively pursued his art for only five years.
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