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Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence

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Treść dostarczona przez Tony I. Bruckner. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez Tony I. Bruckner lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.

13 Minutes Ago - FREE READ NOW: https://lenteragunungbudeg.blogspot.com/?book=0711268185 ==> Available Formats: #eBook #Audibook #PDF #Kindle #ePub #Mobi <== (Read the book Now) Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence By Full Pages. Immerse yourself in a tale of love, loss, and triumph. Your next great read awaits! Don't miss out � grab your copy today and lose yourself in a story that will stay with you long after the last page.. Book Summary: Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence Studio of the South tells the story of Van Gogh�s stay in Arles, when his powers were at their height… Van Gogh�s home and studio was the Yellow House, which he rented two months after his arrival in Arles. It provided his own personal space to sleep and paint � a welcome change from a cramped hotel room. Van Gogh immediately dreamed of sharing his new home with a fellow artist from Paris. Life would be cheaper, but more importantly it would be stimulating to live and work with a companion. He described it as the �studio in the south�. Vincent first used this expression in a letter to his brother Theo. Asking for money to buy beds and other furniture, he exclaimed: �How I�d like to set myself up so that I could have a home of my own� Once furnished, �we�d have a studio in the south where we could put someone up�. He regarded his beloved Yellow House as not simply a physical space, but a �living studio�. The Yellow House, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation) DISCOVERING ARLES Van Gogh arrived in Provence at an extraordinary moment. Having taken the overnight train from Paris he awoke on the morning of 20 February 1888 to find the countryside blanketed with snow, although Arles normally enjoys mild Mediterranean winters. He described the scene to Theo: �The landscape under the snow with the white peaks against a sky as bright as the snow was just like the winter landscapes the Japanese did.� The white hills were the Alpilles (the Little Alps), a chain with craggy peaks which begins just north of Arles � and which would soon appear in the background of many of his landscapes. A local newspaper reported that the snow was 45 centimetres deep, �enormous for the land of the sun�. Arles seen from the Wheatfields, Mus�e Rodin, Paris THE RH�NE AND ITS CANALS Langlois Bridge with Washerwomen, Kr�ller- M�ller Museum, Otterlo Langlois Bridge with Washerwomen was completed in mid-March 1888, just three weeks after Vincent�s arrival. Writing to Theo, he described it as �a drawbridge, with a little carriage going across it, outlined against a blue sky � the river blue as well, the banks orange with greenery, a group of washerwomen wearing blouses and multicoloured bonnets�. Quay with Sand Barges, August 1888, oil on canvas, 55 x 65 cm, Folkwang Museum, Essen (F449) Van Gogh later painted a similar scene, Quay with Sand Barges, this time with part of the embankment. His striking perspective omits the sky. He described the scene: �Boats seen from a quay, from above the two boats are a purplish pink, the water is very green, no sky, a tricolour flag on the mast. A workman with a wheelbarrow is unloading sand.� Trinquetaille Bridge, October 1888, oil on canvas, 74 x 93 cm, private collection On the other side of the Rh�ne lay the small town of Trinquetaille, which in 1875 had been linked to Arles by a bridge. Van Gogh painted Trinquetaille Bridge from the Arles side. Selecting a dramatic viewpoint, he looked up the wide steps heading from the street to the embankment and then up to the bridge itself. A sprinkling of pedestrians add scale and movement. The cylindrical object behind the small tree is probably a pissoire. More from Martin Bailey MARTIN BAILEY is a leading specialist on Van Gogh and an arts journalist. He is a London-based correspondent for The Art Newspaper. Bailey has curated several exhibitions on Van Gogh including o

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Treść dostarczona przez Tony I. Bruckner. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez Tony I. Bruckner lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.

13 Minutes Ago - FREE READ NOW: https://lenteragunungbudeg.blogspot.com/?book=0711268185 ==> Available Formats: #eBook #Audibook #PDF #Kindle #ePub #Mobi <== (Read the book Now) Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence By Full Pages. Immerse yourself in a tale of love, loss, and triumph. Your next great read awaits! Don't miss out � grab your copy today and lose yourself in a story that will stay with you long after the last page.. Book Summary: Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence Studio of the South tells the story of Van Gogh�s stay in Arles, when his powers were at their height… Van Gogh�s home and studio was the Yellow House, which he rented two months after his arrival in Arles. It provided his own personal space to sleep and paint � a welcome change from a cramped hotel room. Van Gogh immediately dreamed of sharing his new home with a fellow artist from Paris. Life would be cheaper, but more importantly it would be stimulating to live and work with a companion. He described it as the �studio in the south�. Vincent first used this expression in a letter to his brother Theo. Asking for money to buy beds and other furniture, he exclaimed: �How I�d like to set myself up so that I could have a home of my own� Once furnished, �we�d have a studio in the south where we could put someone up�. He regarded his beloved Yellow House as not simply a physical space, but a �living studio�. The Yellow House, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation) DISCOVERING ARLES Van Gogh arrived in Provence at an extraordinary moment. Having taken the overnight train from Paris he awoke on the morning of 20 February 1888 to find the countryside blanketed with snow, although Arles normally enjoys mild Mediterranean winters. He described the scene to Theo: �The landscape under the snow with the white peaks against a sky as bright as the snow was just like the winter landscapes the Japanese did.� The white hills were the Alpilles (the Little Alps), a chain with craggy peaks which begins just north of Arles � and which would soon appear in the background of many of his landscapes. A local newspaper reported that the snow was 45 centimetres deep, �enormous for the land of the sun�. Arles seen from the Wheatfields, Mus�e Rodin, Paris THE RH�NE AND ITS CANALS Langlois Bridge with Washerwomen, Kr�ller- M�ller Museum, Otterlo Langlois Bridge with Washerwomen was completed in mid-March 1888, just three weeks after Vincent�s arrival. Writing to Theo, he described it as �a drawbridge, with a little carriage going across it, outlined against a blue sky � the river blue as well, the banks orange with greenery, a group of washerwomen wearing blouses and multicoloured bonnets�. Quay with Sand Barges, August 1888, oil on canvas, 55 x 65 cm, Folkwang Museum, Essen (F449) Van Gogh later painted a similar scene, Quay with Sand Barges, this time with part of the embankment. His striking perspective omits the sky. He described the scene: �Boats seen from a quay, from above the two boats are a purplish pink, the water is very green, no sky, a tricolour flag on the mast. A workman with a wheelbarrow is unloading sand.� Trinquetaille Bridge, October 1888, oil on canvas, 74 x 93 cm, private collection On the other side of the Rh�ne lay the small town of Trinquetaille, which in 1875 had been linked to Arles by a bridge. Van Gogh painted Trinquetaille Bridge from the Arles side. Selecting a dramatic viewpoint, he looked up the wide steps heading from the street to the embankment and then up to the bridge itself. A sprinkling of pedestrians add scale and movement. The cylindrical object behind the small tree is probably a pissoire. More from Martin Bailey MARTIN BAILEY is a leading specialist on Van Gogh and an arts journalist. He is a London-based correspondent for The Art Newspaper. Bailey has curated several exhibitions on Van Gogh including o

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