Vincent van Gogh - Self-Portrait. Dedicated to Paul Gauguin 1888

Ploughed Field 1888 Portrait of Eugene Boch 1888 The Poet's Garden 1888 Self-Portrait. Dedicated to Paul Gauguin 1888 The Sower: Outskirts of Arles in the Background 1888 Starry Night Over the Rhone 1888 Vincent s House in Arles The Yellow House 1888
Self-Portrait. Dedicated to Paul Gauguin 1888

Self-Portrait. Dedicated to Paul Gauguin 1888
62x52cm oil/canvas
Cambridge, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University

<< Previous G a l l e r y Next >>

From Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University :
In early 1888, Van Gogh moved to Arles in the south of France, where he hoped to establish an art colony. Believing that painting could be reinvented through the genre of portraiture, he encouraged his fellow artists to paint themselves, and then to exchange the canvases. After receiving self-portraits from Emile Bernard and Gauguin, who were working together in Brittany at the time, Van Gogh inscribed this painting “To my friend Paul Gauguin,” and sent it to him. He described the process of creating his arresting likeness in several letters to his brother Theo, an art dealer in Paris, explaining how he manipulated his features in response to Japanese prints, changed the contours of his jacket for coloristic effect, and painted the background “pale veronese green” without any shadows. Shortly after he sent the work to Gauguin, however, their friendship deteriorated, and Gauguin sold it for three hundred francs.