Autore
Bailey M.
Editore
National Gallery of Scotland
Luogo di pubblicazione
ISBN
Pagine
144
Dimensioni
26x24
Lingua
Anno pubblicazione
2006
Rilegatura
Illustrazioni
80 ill b/n
Vincent van Gogh has become one of the best known and best loved artists in the history of art, but he is said to have sold only a single painting in his entire life. An extraordinary figure, whose art and life were inextricably and tragically intertwined, he is seen by many as the archetypal misunder¬stood, tormented genius. Astonish¬ingly, he was only active as an artist for some ten years, during which time his style changed dramatically from the dark realist work of his early Dutch years, via the lessons he learned in Paris from Impressionism, to the highly disturbing work of his last period with its writhing brushwork and febrile colours. This book examines the fascinating story of how his work gradually came to be appreciated and collected in Britain. In focusing on this early taste for the artist, the book uncovers important new, and unpublished, research on the collectors and on the British interest in Van Gogh