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A lonely Van Gogh painted postman Joseph Roulin and his family in a creative frenzy. The portraits, on view at MFA Boston, ...
The exhibition reveals Van Gogh’s intense devotion to painting—even through deep sorrow and unbearable hallucinations.
What, one could legitimately ask, did this lonely man need from the Roulins? The question intrudes on what seems most affecting and almost sacred about Van Gogh’s Roulin family portraits.
Yet, the Museum of Fine Art, Boston uses its new exhibition, “Van Gogh: The Roulin Family Portraits,” to prompt ... rethink the iconic artist as a man focused on art’s ability to foster ...
Vincent van ... portrait of the man in his dark blue uniform with its brass buttons, and the MoMA’s more closely cropped view with its striking floral background—are of course among Van Gogh ...
Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts offers the first major exhibition devoted to these canvases, featuring 14 of the works Van Gogh ...
Other hypotheses are more plausible. We know that Van Gogh was forced to paint himself for lack of models: all the self-portraits in his museum in Amsterdam may not show us the faces he most wanted to ...
Van Gogh: The Roulin Family Portraits, on view through September ... to resonate with him through the end of his life. “The man is a fervent republican and socialist, reasons very well and ...
A giant Van Gogh in Altona, Canada, is getting restored after a public survey voted to save the wind-damaged local landmark, ...
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