Thursday, October 15, 2015

Vincent Van Gogh, “The Potato Eaters,” 1885

Van Gogh’s first major work, “The Potato Eaters,” was painted in dark earth tones, a stark contrast from the hues in his later landscapes. Its aim was to capture the grim realities of peasant life.

The Potato Easters was painted in the village of Nuenen, where van Gogh’s parent had lived since 1883. Vicnet lived there for two years – 1884 and 1885. At that time he had already done 250 drawings and 190 paintings.
The Potato Eaters
He sent the Potato Eaters to his brother Theo into Paris. Van Gogh said he wanted to depict peasants as ‘they really were’.  He deliberately chose coarse and unattractive models, believing they would be natural and unspoiled in his finished work.

Van Gogh conceived the painting, as its scale and compositional ambition indicate, as a masterpiece in the strict sense: a demonstration of his artistic coming-of-age following a self –directed apprenticeship that had begun in 1881.

Writing to his sister Willemina two years later, van Gogh still considered The Potato Eaters his most successful panting.
Vincent Van Gogh, “The Potato Eaters,” 1885

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