Vincent van Gogh’s influence on Expressionism at Van Gogh Museum |
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| Tuesday, 30 January 2007 12:34 |
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Amsterdam, NL - The Van Gogh Museum presents Vincent van Gogh and Expressionism which is jointly organized with the Neue Galerie New York. This is the first show to highlight the impact of Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) on German and Austrian Expressionists and comprises almost a hundred paintings, prints and drawings from the Van Gogh Museum and the Neue Galerie, as well as loans from other major international museums and private collections. USG People is the main sponsor of this exhibition. On exhibit until 4 March 2007. Museum directors and private collectors in both Germany and Austria were among the first to start buying the work of Vincent van Gogh and by 1914 there were no less than 164 works by Van Gogh in German and Austrian collections. The many traveling exhibitions that were organized helped expose an entire generation of young, modern artists to Van Gogh’s expressive works. Early purchases, such as Van Gogh’s Poppies in the Field (1889, Kunsthalle Bremen) which led to tumultuous debates after the Bremen museum had acquired the painting, and Vineyards at Auvers (1890, Saint Louis Art Museum), are featured in this exhibition. Van Gogh’s influence is evident in many Expressionist works as painters emulated the pure, bright colors of his paintings in their own art. Van Gogh’s emphatic brushwork and his contrasting color combinations also made a profound impression. By showing works by Van Gogh side by side with works by young Expressionists the exhibition reveals the full extent of this influence. Original letters, pre-1914 exhibition catalogues as well as an audiovisual presentation further enrich the display. The show is divided into four themes:
Van Gogh and Der Blaue Reiter Van Gogh and Vienna
Following its debut in Amsterdam, Vincent van Gogh and Expressionism can be seen in the Neue Galerie New York, from 23 March to 2 July 2007 (www.neuegalerie.org). Catalogue A richly illustrated catalogue, Vincent van Gogh and Expressionism accompanies the exhibition, written by guest curator Jill Lloyd, 160 pages, 125 illustrations, available in English, Dutch, German and French, published by Hatje Cantz Verlag, in cooperation with Waanders Publishers and Gallimard. On sale at the Van Gogh Museum, via www.vangoghmuseum.com Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |



Van Gogh and Die Brücke
Van Gogh and (self) portraiture
