Fire in his soul Van Gogh, Paris, and the making of an artist

Miles Unger

Book - 2025

"Vincent Van Gogh arrived in the French capital on the last day of February 1886, a month short of his thirty-third birthday. He was a man beaten down by life, half-starved, and nearly broken psychologically. He was saved by his brother Theo, who provided him with room, board, and, most crucially, emotional support while he attempted to master the difficult craft of painting. Thus far, Vincent's crude scenes of peasant life rendered in murky shades of brown and gray were both hackneyed and amateurish. Theo, a successful art dealer at a prestigious Parisian firm, dismissed them as gloomy, unappealing, and, worst of all, unmarketable. By the time Vincent left Paris, almost exactly two years later, he'd transformed himself into ...one of the most original artists of the age, turning out works of hallucinatory intensity in vivid hues and stamped with his own distinctive personality. A Fire in His Soul chronicles this remarkable transformation. It's a tale filled with tragedy and triumph, personal anguish and creative fulfillment, as Vincent, through sheer force of will, reinvents himself as a painter of unparalleled expressive power. Along the way, the reader will discover an unfamiliar Van Gogh: not the solitary genius of the popular imagination, shunned by an uncomprehending world and conjuring masterpieces from the depths of his lonely soul. In Paris, he was at the center of a community of like-minded seekers. Here, Van Gogh was able to engage in a lively dialogue with fellow artists almost as daring as he was, expanding his notion of what art could and should be. It was in the cafes and studios of Montmartre and in the grand galleries of the Louvre and Luxembourg, that Van Gogh received his artistic education--a crash course that at first disoriented him but ultimately sparked his creative breakthrough. Working alongside such legendary figures as Gauguin, Toulouse-Lautrec, Seurat, and Signac, Vincent perfected his technique and launched an artistic revolution."--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Pegasus Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Miles Unger (author)
Edition
First Pegasus Books cloth edition
Physical Description
xxvi, 646 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [599]-610) and index.
ISBN
9781639368457
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Six hundred pages on two years in his life might seem excessive, until one starts reading. Van Gogh (1853-1890) may be the only artist whose work is recognized by people with no interest in art. Biographies are plentiful, and journalist and art historian Unger, author ofPicasso and the Painting That Shocked the World, insists that this is not another. Instead, it's a close examination of 1886-88, the years that the artist spent in Paris with his brother after arriving as an obscure painter of drab scenes of peasant life. Unger delivers an account of the young artist that may unnerve readers accustomed to the colorful media portraits. His van Gogh is a cripplingly neurotic, perhaps mentally ill, figure who "found relief from his own pain by inflicting it on those closest to him" and who leeched unmercifully off his younger brother. Unger includes an expert history of France's art scene over the previous century, dominated by the early struggle and later triumph of the avant-garde. Despite the traditional depiction of van Gogh as a solitary genius, he quickly joined a coterie of like-minded painters (Paul Gauguin, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Georges Seurat, Paul Signac), and his work began to take on the vivid color and imagery he is known for. It didn't hurt that his brother was an art dealer more willing than colleagues to patronize new work. By the time van Gogh left for the south of France, his work seethed with the nervous energy that attracted praise even during his lifetime. Despite abbreviated attention to the two years before his death, Unger delivers valuable insights into van Gogh's person as well as his art. An incisive inquiry into an immortal artist's life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.