“Self Portrait, dedicated to Paul Gauguin” by Vincent van Gogh is a self-portrait depicting his face as it appeared in the mirror. His right side in the image is, in reality, the left side of his face.
Van Gogh’s painted dozens of self-portraits. They were an essential part of his work as a painter.
Vincent van Gogh wanted to reinvent painting through the genre of portraiture, he encouraged other artists to paint themselves, and then to exchange the canvases.
Van Gogh received self-portraits from Emile Bernard, and Gauguin and Van Gogh sent this portrait to Gauguin with the inscription “To my friend Paul Gauguin.”
He described the process of creating his painting in several letters to his brother Theo, an art dealer in Paris. Van Gogh explaining how he modeled his features influenced by Japanese prints.
He added color effect with the contours of his jacket and painted the background in a “pale Veronese green” without shadows.
Van Gogh suffered from psychotic episodes and delusions; he often neglected his physical health, did not eat properly, and drank heavily.
His friendship with Gauguin ended after a confrontation with a razor when in a rage, he severed part of his left ear. Soon after, Gauguin sold this painting.
Van Gogh spent time in psychiatric hospitals, however, his depression continued, and on 27 July 1890, Van Gogh shot himself in the chest with a revolver. He died at 37 years of age from his injuries two days later.
Vincent Willem van Gogh is among the most famous and influential figures in the history of Western art. Van Gogh was unsuccessful during his lifetime and was considered a madman and a failure.
He created about 2,100 artworks, including around 860 oil paintings, most of them in the last two years of his life. They were characterized by bold colors and dramatic, impulsive, and expressive brushwork that contributed to the foundations of modern art.
Vincent van Gogh and Japanese Art
Vincent van Gogh began his deep interest in Japanese prints when he discovered magazine illustrations of artwork. He was fascinated by woodblock prints using Japanese techniques that depicted Japanese life.
In 1885, van Gogh started collecting ukiyo-e prints that could be bought in small Parisian shops.
Van Gogh shared these prints with his contemporaries and organized a Japanese print exhibition in Paris in 1887. One version of Van Gogh’s Portrait of Pere Tanguy (1887) featured a backdrop of Japanese prints.
Japanese woodblock prints inspired him, and in his works, he reflected the vibrancy of color and light that he observed in Japanese woodblock prints.
Death of Vincent van Gogh
In late July 1890, Van Gogh was shot in the stomach and died two days later. Until recently, everyone assumed that Van Gogh shot himself; however, recent biographers have challenged the conventional account of the artist’s death.
They argue that it was unlikely that van Gogh killed himself, noting the upbeat disposition of the paintings he created immediately preceding his death. They also highlight his private correspondence in which Van Gogh described suicide as sinful and immoral.
There are many other inconsistencies in the assumption that Van Gogh was responsible for the shot. The alternative hypothesis is that Van Gogh did not commit suicide but instead was a possible victim of foul play.
Biographers now postulate that after he was fatally wounded, Van Gogh welcomed death and believed his tormentors had done him a favor.
Hence his widely quoted deathbed remark:
“Do not accuse anyone… it is I who wanted to kill myself.”
We will never know the truth, but this controversy is now part of the legacy of the mystery of Van Gogh’s life.
Self Portrait (dedicated to Paul Gauguin)
- Title: Self Portrait (dedicated to Paul Gauguin)
- Artist: Vincent van Gogh
- Year: 1888
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions 61.5 × 50.3 cm (24.2 × 19.8 in)
- Museum: Fogg Art Museum, Harvard Art Museums
Vincent Willem van Gogh
- Name: Vincent Willem van Gogh
- Born: 1853 – Zundert, Netherlands
- Died: 1890 (aged 37) – Auvers-Sur-Oise, France
- Resting place: Cimetière d’Auvers-Sur-Oise, Auvers-Sur-Oise, France
- Nationality: Dutch
- Movement: Post-Impressionism
- JOM Collection:
- Starry Night
- Starry Night Over the Rhône
- Sunflowers
- Irises (Getty Museum)
- Self Portrait, dedicated to Paul Gauguin
- Portrait of the Postman Joseph Roulin
- White House at Night
- The Night Café
- Self-Portrait as a Painter
- Self Portrait with Felt Hat
- Green Wheat Field with Cypress
- The Raising of Lazarus
- Self-Portrait’ Mutilated Ear
- Café Terrace at Night
- Tarascon Stagecoach
- Wheatfield with Crows
- Bedroom in Arles
- Portrait of the Artist’s Mother
- Vase with Red Poppies
- Memory of the Garden at Etten
- Great Peacock Moth
- Farmhouse in Provence
- Agostina Segatori Sitting in the Café du Tambourin
- Fishing Boats on the Beach at Saintes-Maries
- Seascape at Saintes-Maries
- Girl in White
- Young Peasant Woman with Straw Hat Sitting in the Wheat
- Van Gogh’s Chair
- Gauguin’s Chair
- Road with Cypress and Star
- Almond Blossoms
- The Church at Auvers
- The Yellow House
- Portrait of Père Tanguy
- Portrait of Doctor Félix Rey
“Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin” by Vincent van Gogh
Virtual Tour of the Harvard Art Museums
- “Saint Luke painting the Virgin” by Master of the Holy Blood
- “Self Portrait, dedicated to Paul Gauguin” by Vincent van Gogh
- “Piazza San Marco with the Basilica, Venice” by Canaletto
- “Grazing Horses IV, Three Red Horses” by Franz Marc
- “The Gare Saint-Lazare: Arrival of a Train” by Claude Monet
Self Portrait Dedicated To Paul Gauguin – Van Gogh
Van Gogh, Self Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin
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“What would life be if we had no courage to attempt anything?”
– Vincent van Gogh
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Photo Credit: 1) Vincent van Gogh [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
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