Van GoghGroot Zundert 1853 - Auvers-sur-Oise 1890
Articles
Whatever the reasons for his style, Van Gogh made full use of the distortions
Van Gogh’s Church in Auvers-sur-Oise (1890)
Van Gogh is one of the few artists whose hidden elements revealed on EPPH confirm the conventional view of his art.
Van Gogh’s Cypresses with Two Female Figures (1889)
A spiritual journey is one of the basic plots of literature and a common metaphor in both philosophy and religion. Why not art?
Van Gogh’s On the Road to Tarascon (1888)
One of Van Gogh's first portraits in France of someone other than himself was "himself"
Van Gogh’s Portrait of Alexander Reid (1887)
Landscapes, if art, are never just landscapes. Are they even landscapes? The Chinese call them "Mindscapes"
Van Gogh’s Snowy Landscape with Arles in the Background (1888)
This portrait of a one-eyed man is a simple illustration of the two modes of poetic vision: insight and observation.
Van Gogh’s The One-Eyed Man
See how a portrait viewed one way resembles a portrait; viewed another way turns the world inside out
Van Gogh’s The Zouave (1888)
EPPH Blog Posts on Van Gogh
Galleries
© Simon Abrahams. Articles on this site are the copyright of Simon Abrahams. To use copyrighted material in print or other media for purposes beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Websites may link to this page without permission (please do) but may not reproduce the material on their own site without crediting Simon Abrahams and EPPH.