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Gauguin-Van Gogh exhibition in Amsterdam
01 February 2002



Cet article se compose de 3 pages.
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Van Gogh used to transcend everything he saw, comparing Isaac Israels to Rembrandt and making Millet the equal of Delacroix while Gauguin ignored superlatives and stuck to sure judgements though he was much inclined to be a theorist who knew that by going his own way he would be less and less understood.

All they had in common was that they were rejected by the public, art critics and a society that crushed their dreams and transformed their lives into a nightmare. They started to work together and went in the vicinity of the Alyscamps, an alley bordered with tombs where Van Gogh produced four paintings and Gauguin two.

Filled with emotion, Van Gogh worked frantically to depict reality in an ecstatic way while Gauguin limited himself to express the poetry of what he saw.

Gauguin tried to induce Van Gogh to follow his imagination but the latter quickly felt at a loss. He then painted the members of the Roulin family and strengthened his style ignoring Gauguin's recommendation to represent peace and calm. As a result, the Dutch artist struggled with his brushes and could not express what Gauguin was trying to instil in his mind.

Van Gogh finally preferred to follow his instinct and quarrelled with Gauguin who had the sensation he was dealing with an obtuse mind. Refusing to change his style, Van Gogh went on to challenge Gauguin who could not bear his remarks.

Angry at Van Gogh's attitude, Gauguin thus became an enemy. As a result, the atmosphere in Arles quickly deteriorated and the two artists came to a clash. On December 25th 1888, Van Gogh had a fit of madness and leapt at Gauguin a razor in his hand but the French artist, sensing danger, avoided to be slashed. Vincent then fled and went on to cut his ear while Gauguin waited no longer to return to Paris.

There is finally little in common between Van Gogh and Gauguin, except for the fact that they were working outside conventional circles and both striving to develop a new kind of painting. They succeeded in their quest but not during their pathetic existences, Van Gogh committing suicide after feeling he would remain misunderstood forever, Gauguin fleeing the industrial world to seek refuge among natives in Tahiti where he spent his last years brooding over his failures.

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