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Poetry of the Ordinary
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"I always feel I am a
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traveler," Vincent van Gogh wrote from Arles, France, in 1888, "going somewhere
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and to some destination." Van Gogh wandered around Europe more rootlessly than
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his friend and sometime roommate Paul Gauguin, who could make a nifty domestic
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nest for himself even in the South Seas. Van Gogh the preacher's son, born in a
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dismal town in Holland in 1853 and dead of a self-inflicted pistol shot to the
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chest 37 years later, never stayed put. He ran through several careers during
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his 20s--art dealer in the Hague, schoolteacher in London, missionary to coal
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miners in southern Belgium--before settling on the least secure one of painter.
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This restlessness helps explain his obsessive and often hallucinatory
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depictions, from his first pictures to his last, of houses and rooms. "Looking
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at the picture ought to rest the brain," he told his younger brother and
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dealer, Theo, referring to his famous painting of his bedroom at Arles ( The
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Bedroom , 1888). The picture, a perennial favorite on dorm-room walls, may
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look like a refuge, but van Gogh had lost faith in such earthly habitations.
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The gorgeous golden bed with its heavy white pillow squeezed right from the
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tube already feels elegiac. Empty bed, empty chairs, no Vincent, no Paul.
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While the
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van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam gets a facelift and a new wing, the heart of its
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collection (including The Bedroom ) is on display, like the Dutch crown
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jewels, in Washington. Seventy paintings have been culled from the roughly 200
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in the Amsterdam treasure trove--the van Gogh family collection, passed on from
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Vincent to Theo and eventually housed in an extraordinarily popular museum in
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1973. The National Gallery has opted for the kind of bank-vault presentation,
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one or two pictures per plush wall, that worked so well for its Vermeer show
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three years ago. This devotional approach seemed right for Vermeer: so few
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paintings, scattered far and wide, gathered here for once in a lifetime. Van
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Gogh calls for a different treatment, it seems to me, one that places him more
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firmly in his time and place and acknowledges his spirited engagement with
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literature and popular culture.
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But "Van Gogh's Van Goghs" is an old-fashioned show that
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surveys the artist's chronological development as a painter, grouping the
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pictures according to where and when in van Gogh's nomadic life they were
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painted. The show advances no bold new perspective on van Gogh, nor does it
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seek to synthesize recent thinking on him, of which, it should be said, there
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isn't much. (Van Gogh is not a hot commodity in academic art criticism right
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now.) The modest aim of the exhibition and the catalog is to refocus our
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attention on the paintings as paintings, directing our attention to how van
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Gogh made changes in color, brushstroke, and the dimensions of his pictures
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over time. The Washington curators have understandably shied away from the
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Lust for Life myth of the tormented, one-eared artist triumphing in art
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but failing in life. They give van Gogh's madness a shorthand dismissal worthy
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of an HMO: "several seizures, probably caused by a form of epilepsy." But van
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Gogh's unsteady temperament comes through anyway. A roomful of self-portraits,
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with changing identities worthy of Cindy Sherman (van Gogh as citified dandy in
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pink fedora; van Gogh as country yokel in straw hat), implies a sort of plural
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van Gogh, a chameleon personality hard to pin down. And the late paintings
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retain their unsettling power. When Meyer Schapiro looked at Wheatfield With
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Crows (July 1890), he saw it as van Gogh's "deepest avowal," the tortured
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artist's "defense against disintegration" painted a few days before his death.
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The oncoming zigzag crows, swarming like the black choppers in Apocalypse
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Now , are for Schapiro "figures of death." Once you've read Schapiro's
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classic and deeply felt essay, it's hard to see this picture as anything other
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than van Gogh's farewell to the world, his scrawled suicide note. But Richard
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Kendall, in his dispassionate exhibition catalog essay, points out that maybe
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this wasn't (as tradition has it) van Gogh's last painting, and that the
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picture looks pretty cheerful anyway. He concludes that it "might ... be seen
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as a celebration of the love for 'art and life' professed by the painter in one
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of his final letters to Theo." Maybe, but what about those crows?
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By 1890, van Gogh had pretty much banished
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black from his palette. Those crows have escaped from an earlier phase of his
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career, the sepulchral, black-coffee interior of his first major picture,
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The Potato Eaters (1885). We dutifully note (as the wall panel instructs
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us to) "the somber colors and thick application of paint" and van Gogh's remark
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that "these people ... have dug the earth with the self-same hands they are now
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putting into the dish." And yet, what a weird painting. Seeing the picture in
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Washington brings out something I've always felt about this image: that the
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figures, especially the young man to the left wearing what appears to be a
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Union Army hat, look like caricatures of African-Americans.
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Strangely
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enough, van Gogh was a passionate reader of Uncle Tom's Cabin ; we find
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him in 1880 reading Shakespeare and Dickens and "Beecher Stowe." A year later
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he is still mulling over the book, in which "the most beautiful passage" is
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where "the poor slave, knowing that he must die, and sitting for the last time
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with his wife, remembers the words 'Let Cares like a wild deluge come/ And
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storms of sorrow fall,/ May I but safely reach my home,/ My God, my Heaven, my
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all.' " "This is far from theology," van Gogh concludes, "simply a fact that
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the poorest little wood-cutter or peasant on the heath or miner can have
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moments of emotion and inspiration which give him a feeling of an eternal home
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to which he is near." Here van Gogh explicitly links the plight of European
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peasants and American slaves, and pictures such as The Potato Eaters may
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have meant to suggest that equation.
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For this painter who once claimed to be "daffy with piety,"
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our earthly habitation, slave cabin, or peasant hovel is merely temporary.
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That's the message of The Potato Eaters , with its little glinting lamp
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illuminating the darkness and its loaded juxtaposition on the background wall
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of ticking clock and Crucifixion, time and eternity. The early A Pair of
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Shoes (1885) reeks of some of that same piety. This painting inspired
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several paragraphs of purple prose from Martin Heidegger, when the old Nazi was
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holed up in his thatched cottage in the Black Forest after the war, thinking
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about "The Origin of the Work of Art." "From the dark opening of the worn
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insides of the shoes the toilsome tread of the worker stares forth. ... Under
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the soles slides the loneliness of the field-path as evening falls. In the
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shoes vibrates the silent call of the earth, its quiet gift of the ripening
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grain and its unexplained self-refusal in the fallow desolation of the wintry
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field." I think van Gogh would have loved this peasant chic. But this picture
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too has a secret strangeness, which has to do with scale. The background of the
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painting suggests a clearing in a landscape, with trees in the distance. One
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suddenly has the illusion that the shoes are huge, monumental. They reach out
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to each other like a couple lost in the wilderness, one upright and confident,
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the other one slouched down in despair. A whole poetry of the ordinary came out
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of such images, from Walker Evans' frontal portraits of sharecroppers' beds to
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Jasper Johns' deadpan brace of ale cans.
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The one
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moment in the Washington installation that departs from the chaste array of
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paintings suggests what this show might have been, in the hands of curators
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more interested in social context. There are only two works on paper in the
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show: an image of a geisha derived from a Japanese woodblock print on the cover
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of Paris Illustré of 1886, and van Gogh's virtuoso tracing of its
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outlines. To produce his bizarre painting The Courtesan (1887), van Gogh
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enlarged the traced image, replaced the subdued blacks and grays of the kimono
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with bright complementary reds and greens, and added a fantasy Japanese
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background of storks and frogs borrowed from other Japanese prints. He
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constructed this image during his confused Paris years, 1886-88, when he tried
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out various Impressionist styles and, except for his self-portraits, produced
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work that looks half-baked.
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But Japan represented something new for van
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Gogh, not the jaggedly cropped edges and off-kilter points of view that
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attracted Degas and Cassatt but rather an imaginary world of nature worship;
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available women; and flat, shadowless color. It is no exaggeration to say that
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when van Gogh escaped to Arles, he invented there his own little private Japan.
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The bedroom at Arles, he tells Theo, is "painted in the free flat tints like
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the Japanese prints." His Field With Flowers Near Arles (1888) is "a
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little town surrounded by fields all covered with yellow and purple flowers;
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exactly--can't you see it?--like a Japanese dream." The apotheosis of his
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Japanese quest is the swooningly gorgeous Almond Blossom , painted in
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February of 1890. The picture, which recalls innumerable Japanese prints
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including one he owned by Utagawa Kunisada that has been reproduced in the
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catalog, has no obvious center. The gnarled and wonderfully drawn branches
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toward the bottom break into the allover blossoms, with their red detail and
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extraordinary radiating energy.
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Japan was less a set of
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technical possibilities for van Gogh than it was a vision, already almost
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posthumous, of celestial happiness and escape. Unlike Gauguin's literal flight
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to Tahiti, van Gogh didn't need to go to Japan to fulfill his exotic yearnings.
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His Japan didn't exist on Earth anyway. Lying in the insane asylum in St. Remy
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after one of his seizures, he could gaze in the southern light at the Japanese
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prints with which he'd decorated the room and the Japanese-like flowers
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blooming outside the window. Gauguin had lasted two months in Arles, finding
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van Gogh too intense a companion for comfort. But for Vincent van Gogh, in
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flight from the shadowed northland, Provence was far enough away. And anyway,
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as usual, he was just passing through.
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