Gezeichnete Bilder Van Gogh herausgegeben von Klaus Albrecht Schröder und Heinz Widauer, Sjraar van Heugten [et al.]

By: Schröder, Klaus Albrecht (com.)Contributor(s): Heugten, Sjraar van [com.] | Widauer, Heinz [com.] | Graphische Sammlung Albertina (Viena, Àustria)Material type: TextTextLanguage: Alemany Publication details: Colònia: DuMont: Albertina 2008 Description: 455 p. : il. col. ; 30 x 25,5 x 4 cmISBN: 9783832191252 Subject(s): Van Gogh, Vincent Willem, 1853-1890 | 2008 | Albertina (Viena) | Dibuix | Exposicions | 2008 | Albertina (Viena) | Dibujo | Exposiciones | Van Gogh, Vincent Willem (1853-1890)Summary: The exhibition offers a new perspective on Vincent van Gogh by focusing on the artist as both painter and draughtsman. Fifty paintings and 100 major watercolours and drawings are on loan from over 60 lenders around the world. They underscore the artistic unity between van Gogh’s expressive draughtsmanship and his radically new use of colour. Amsterdam and is the largest presentation of the artist’s oeuvre since the jubilee exhibition in Amsterdam in 1990. a feeling of sympathy, had originally wanted to become a draughtsman and illustrator, he finally was to revolutionise the art of his century as an artist obsessed with colour, freeing it from the principle of the imitation of reality, as well as from the academies’ dictates of idealness. during his two last years in southern France, Van Gogh’s palette brightened notably. The brownish hues of Salon painting suddenly gave way to the purity of glistening colours. This new colouristic intensity resulted from the artist’s immediate perception of things - he was now working outdoors, in the scorching sunlight of Provence, where he directly confronted himself with his motifs. on the way he dealt with colour and applied it to the canvas. By the time of his suicide in Auvers in 1890, a comprehensive and intensive drawn oeuvre had accumulated; the drawings and watercolours influenced Van Gogh’s painting style profoundly, and it became a personal idiosyncrasy of his that he drew with the brush he had previously dipped into the paint, or that he applied the expressive coloured lines and dots to the canvas directly from the tube. The large, highly finished pen drawings and watercolours are equal in artistic accomplishment to Van Gogh’s paintings in all respects.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Monografia Biblioteca Museu Picasso
75 (Gogh) Sch (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 2009-183

Catàleg de l'exposició presentada a l'Albertina, Viena, 5/09/2008 al 8/12/2008

The exhibition offers a new perspective on Vincent van Gogh by focusing on the artist as both painter and draughtsman. Fifty paintings and 100 major watercolours and drawings are on loan from over 60 lenders around the world. They underscore the artistic unity between van Gogh’s expressive draughtsmanship and his radically new use of colour. Amsterdam and is the largest presentation of the artist’s oeuvre since the jubilee exhibition in Amsterdam in 1990. a feeling of sympathy, had originally wanted to become a draughtsman and illustrator, he finally was to revolutionise the art of his century as an artist obsessed with colour, freeing it from the principle of the imitation of reality, as well as from the academies’ dictates of idealness. during his two last years in southern France, Van Gogh’s palette brightened notably. The brownish hues of Salon painting suddenly gave way to the purity of glistening colours. This new colouristic intensity resulted from the artist’s immediate perception of things - he was now working outdoors, in the scorching sunlight of Provence, where he directly confronted himself with his motifs. on the way he dealt with colour and applied it to the canvas. By the time of his suicide in Auvers in 1890, a comprehensive and intensive drawn oeuvre had accumulated; the drawings and watercolours influenced Van Gogh’s painting style profoundly, and it became a personal idiosyncrasy of his that he drew with the brush he had previously dipped into the paint, or that he applied the expressive coloured lines and dots to the canvas directly from the tube. The large, highly finished pen drawings and watercolours are equal in artistic accomplishment to Van Gogh’s paintings in all respects.

Intercanvi biblioteca

R. 2009/183

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Powered by Koha