Paru le 09/04/2014 | Relié 119 pages
Tout public
préfaces Luc Hoffmann, Maja Hoffmann, Bice Curiger | translation Diane Webb, Catherine Schelbert, Karen Williams, Simon Pleasance
Vincent van Gogh started his career in 1880 as a rather old-fashioned artist, working during his Dutch years in the grey and dark palette of his great examples, the painters of the Barbizon and Hague schools. After his move to Paris in 1886, he developed a truly modern style with a bright and forceful palette. When he settled in Arles in February 1888, the light and the colours of Provence inspired him profoundly, and his work from that time established his reputation as one of the most significant colorists of all time. With a focused approach, nine paintings by Van Gogh are shown in the context of both the painters that inspired his early work as well as those who guided his transition to modernity.