Thursday, February 3, 2022

Van Gogh. Self- Portraits

 


Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) Self-Portrait, Sept. 1889. National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.

Van Gogh. Self- Portraits opens February 3 – May 8, 2022, at The Courtauld Gallery in London. This unprecedented exhibition takes as its springboard Van Gogh’s iconic Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear, one of the most celebrated works in The Courtauld collection, and will bring together around half of the self-portraits Van Gogh created during his career.

An outstanding selection of more than 15 works will be brought together to trace the evolution of Van Gogh’s self-representation, from his early Self-Portrait with a Dark Felt Hat, created in 1886 during his formative period in Paris, to Self-Portrait with a Palette, painted at the asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in September 1889, one of his last self-portraits before his death in 1890.

Two self-portraits were painted only one week apart at the asylum, in late August and early September 1889, but show Van Gogh in very different lights – the first was painted as he was still in the midst of the severe mental health crisis that had struck him in mid-July, while the second was created as he was slowly recovering. Indeed, Van Gogh made clear that being able to paint was key to his healing process. Shown together for the first time in over a century at The Courtauld Gallery, the self-portraits provide a unique insight into Van Gogh’s changing psychological condition and the way he viewed himself.

Van Gogh’s first major mental health crisis occurred on December 23, 1888, when he cut off a large part of his left ear, following a dispute with his friend and fellow artist Paul Gauguin. Following a series of relapses, on May 8, 1889, Van Gogh voluntarily admitted himself to the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum, located in a former monastery close to Saint-Rémy, France. He stayed there for a year, during which his mental health fluctuated significantly. Fearing that doctors would not allow him to paint, Van Gogh asked his brother Theo to write to the asylum on his behalf, stating: “working on my paintings is quite necessary to my recovery”. Confined indoors without any models other than himself, but still wanting to practice painting figures, Van Gogh turned to self-portraiture.

Painted in late August 1889, Self-Portrait, on loan from The National Museum of Art in Oslo, reveals the way in which Van Gogh did not shy away from confronting his mental state. In a letter to his brother, Van Gogh described the portrait as “an attempt from when I was ill”. While the composition and sideways glance are familiar, this representation has a distinctly sombre feel, with matte, muddy colours and mottled brushstrokes rendering Van Gogh’s features less recognisable. His hair is short, his beard patchy, and his green eyes are dull.

In close succession in the first week of September 1889, feeling recovered, Van Gogh painted another self-portrait, the execution of which shows a painter in full command of his powers. Van Gogh’s depiction confronts himself, as well as the viewer, in contrast to the skittish, sideways glance of the Oslo self-portrait painted just one week earlier. Varied and dynamic brushwork, precise contrast between red hair and white flesh, and a careful selection of blue pigments attest to its careful planning. Significantly, he portrays himself as a painter at work, a rare occurrence in his oeuvre, wearing a painter’s smock holding brushes and a palette. On loan from The National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, this self-portrait shows Van Gogh’s determination to return to painting after weeks of torment, and look at himself anew following the debilitating mental health crisis he suffered that summer.

Dr Karen Serres, curator of the exhibition, says: “Seeing these works together will be an incredibly moving experience, the embodiment of Van Gogh’s resilience and courage in the face of personal adversity. It shows what painting meant to him and to his recovery, and how he was able to create, in the most difficult of circumstances, works that remain incredibly powerful over a century later.”

Van Gogh gave the Oslo self-portrait to friends during a visit to Arles in January 1890, while the Washington DC self-portrait was sent to his brother in Paris. The two paintings have not been together since they were first made in his workroom at the asylum at Saint-Rémy, and are presented together for the first time in over 130 years at The Courtauld.

This landmark exhibition is the first in the Morgan Stanley series of major exhibitions staged in The Courtauld’s newly refurbished Denise Coates Exhibition Galleries.

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) Self-Portrait, late August 1889. The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo.