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The Starry Painting by Vincent Van Gogh

The Starry Painting by Vincent Van Gogh

By Tsunami KarkiPublished 3 years ago 5 min read
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The Starry Painting by Vincent Van Gogh

Today Vincent van Gogh is regarded as one of the most famous 19th-century artists, and his 1889 Starry Night painting is not only one of his most famous works, but also one of the world's most famous paintings. This oil painting by Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh, painted in June 1889, depicts the view of the sun from the east window of his asylum in Saint-Remy-de-Provence with the addition of an unimaginable city. Starry Night is an unseen world painting from 1889 with a clear night sky and a small mountain town and is one of the most famous works by Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh.

Van Gogh took up the challenge of painting the night scene and wrote about it not only to his brother Theo but also to his fellow artist Emile Bernard and his sister Willemien. Van Gogh abandoned the Impressionist doctrine of natural truth and sought a sense of instability, vibrant colors, and emotionally charged images, making his work a staple of the latest Expressionist paintings.

The style developed by Van Gogh in Paris, where he met Impressionist, Neo-Impressionist, and Pointillist George Seurat worked and continued to do so until the end of his life, known as Post-Impressionism, and symbolic representations. My passion for mixing dream and reality with visual and non-fiction is reflected in the night paintings I painted in Arle Saint-Remy between 1889 and 1890. and the symbolic meaning of what I see at night.

Vincent Van Gogh drew The Starry Night during his 12-month stay in Saint-Paul de Mausole, a refuge in Saint-Remy-de-Provence, France. He suffered from the problem for several months, during which he cut off part of his ear with a razor. Fainting was repeated and he spent the last two years of his life at a center in Arle-Saint-Rey, painting what he saw through the windows of his window into the gardens and surrounding fields.

Van Gogh was a favorite of the Cypress and found it difficult to draw. He created a total of three paintings with cypress as a motif, and on a night full of stars is the most prominent. Van Gogh's telescopic view on six (F.717) pictures of wheat fields and cypresses at night brings medicine to the picture to another level.

Van Gogh saw the night sky in his closed bedroom window and wrote a letter to Theo describing a beautiful morning star morning in the summer of 1889. One of the first paintings with such a view is the F611, the mountainous region of Saint-Remy near Copenhagen. The view can be seen from one of his bedroom windows to the east [1] [2] [17] [18] and from there he painted less than twenty-one variations, [citation needed] including Starry Night.

The starry night was painted in mid-July, June 18, the day Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo that he was doing a new study on the starry sky. My first sketch of the night sky, The Starry Nights of the Rhone (1888), was a different exercise, in which the colors of the corresponding color were chosen to magnify each other. He had been whispering light and night sky at the Peace du Forum cafe, but he had the courage to take his first starry night train to look at the Rhone.

Like the oil in the middle of the cloth, the painting is dominated by the moon and the starry sky. It is like a dream and it is not true, parts of the picture are beyond human comprehension and reach. Straight lines and sharp angles separate it from the rest of the work and separate it from the sky in the sky.

The same little star looks like a small sun hanging in the sky, and then the painting shines and shines, illuminating this painting like a star in the night sky lit up in the dark. From one plateau to the other, cypress hills and other trees cover the ground. They bend and rotate in soft angles, accompanied by soft movements in the sky.

Vincent van Gogh's Night Star Painting features a dream interpretation of the artist's living room with a broad view of Saint-Remy de Provence. The painting is celebrated as his opus magnum shows a view through the window of his hospital room at night, but it is also a painting painted in memory during the day. This picture with its friend of the day, an olive tree, is based on fun and memory.

After arriving in Arles, France, in 1888, Vincent van Gogh was a little worried about catching the night sky. Starry Night was filmed while at the Saint-Remy Center, and its conduct at the time was unpredictable due to the magnitude of its attacks. Although Van Gogh repeats this idea in his hospital camp window several times in his work, his Night Star painting is the only nightly lesson of this vision.

Encouraged by this consistent color combination, short brushstrokes, and graceful use of color, Van Gogh brightened his palette, released his brush, and emphasized the use of body paint. While Paul aC / c Zanne, Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, and George Seurat created their own unique styles they were all united in the interest of expressing their emotional and psychological reactions to the world with strong colors and expressive and symbolic images.

The painting depicts not only aspects of Van Gogh's view of the landscape from his asylum window, as renowned art historian Albert Boime pointed out in his study, but also the celestial objects not only seen with Venus but also with the constellation of Aries. This combination of motifs is Gauguin’s first echo of his work on his Breakdown. On June 16, 1889, Van Goight described in a letter to his sister Wil the second of the two lands mentioned in his work. This is F719, "Green Fields of Prague," the first sketch of the center we painted in Pleinair.

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Tsunami Karki

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