For an formidable exhibition, New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Artwork is to assemble 40 of Van Gogh’s work and drawings of cypresses. These hovering bushes turned one of many artist’s key motifs in Provence and seem in his masterpiece Starry Night time (June 1889). Van Gogh’s Cypresses, chosen by the museum’s curator Susan Stein, will run from 22 Might to 27 August 2023.
Writing to his brother Theo in June 1889, Vincent expressed his willpower to seize the essence of those hanging bushes: “The cypresses nonetheless preoccupy me, I’d love to do one thing with them just like the canvases of the sunflowers as a result of it astonishes me that nobody has but completed them as I see them”. They did certainly grow to be his very private imaginative and prescient.
Vincent later in contrast the 2 motifs—and thought of their variations. Visually, the tree’s darkish foliage and the flower’s vibrant yellow petals could be seen as opposites. The longevity of the cypress historically evokes loss of life and immortality, whereas the sunflower symbolises the transitory joys of life. However for Van Gogh, each motifs have been key components in his notion of the panorama of Provence.
Van Gogh’s Drawbridge (Might 1888) Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud, Cologne
Van Gogh first painted cypresses within the spring of 1888, a couple of months after his arrival in Arles. These early works embrace Drawbridge (Might 1888), through which a pair of cypresses rise into the sky. As so usually, Van Gogh exaggerated the peak of his bushes, which turns into obvious right here as soon as one truly compares the cypresses to the low buildings that they overshadow.
Nevertheless it was after Van Gogh’s transfer to the asylum on the outskirts of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in Might 1889 that the cypresses assumed a vital significance. This space, on the foot of the tall hills generally known as Les Alpilles, was famend for these bushes.
“The Large Cypress of Saint-Rémy” (on the Gaillard farm, two kilometres from the asylum), printed in La Nature, 4 March 1893
A Wheat Subject, with Cypresses is amongst Van Gogh’s most interesting Saint-Rémy landscapes. He made three variations, two of which will probably be within the Met present: the primary (June 1889), painted open air, within the museum’s personal assortment, and an much more highly effective work completed a couple of months later in his studio (September 1889), approaching mortgage from London’s Nationwide Gallery. This would be the first time that these two photos have been exhibited collectively since 1901.
Van Gogh’s A Wheat Subject, with Cypresses (September 1889) Nationwide Gallery, London
In each variations a golden band of ripened wheat ripples throughout the foreground, enlivened by a scattering of scarlet poppies. A number of olive bushes lie marooned within the sea of wheat and barely additional away stands a clump of darkish cypresses, shut collectively. The tallest one nearly reaches the highest of the canvas, silhouetted towards the swirling clouds.
Starry Night time (June 1889), painted in the identical month as the unique A Wheat Subject, with Cypresses, could be very totally different, as a nocturnal scene. Van Gogh captured the dynamism of the twisted types of the bushes, creating a strong visible hyperlink between the earth and the heavens. Now very not often lent, Starry Night time will journey up Fifth Avenue to the Met exhibition.
Van Gogh’s Cypresses (June 1889) and the drawing Cypresses (June 1889) Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, New York (Rogers Fund, 1949, 49.30) and Brooklyn Museum (Frank L. Babbott Fund and A. Augustus Healy Fund, 38.123)
In another Saint-Rémy landscapes, the bushes dominate the compositions, as within the Met’s personal Cypresses (June 1889). Vincent additionally drew a replica of this portray, to ship to Theo in Paris and present what he was engaged on. Fortuitously, this drawing finally ended up only some miles away from the Met on the Brooklyn Museum, and it too will probably be coming to the present.
Van Gogh’s Window within the Studio (September-October 1889) and Timber within the Backyard of the Asylum (September-October 1889) Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis) and personal assortment
In Window within the Studio (September-October 1889), an intimate depiction of Van Gogh’s workroom, the significance of the cypresses might hardly be extra evident. As I level out in my e book Starry Night time: Van Gogh on the Asylum, two very sketchily depicted work dangle on the best aspect of the studio wall: the decrease one might be Starry Night time and the higher one is Timber within the Backyard of the Asylum (September-October 1889), which is now in a non-public assortment—it was auctioned by Christie’s in 2010 for £9m.
Van Gogh’s Orchard with Cypresses (April 1888), offered at Christie’s, New York, 9 November Christie’s
Though just about all of the Met’s loans have now been finalised, one work stays unsure: Orchard with Cypresses (April 1888). This offered on 9 November at Christie’s, New York for $117m, a file value for a Van Gogh. On the finish of {the catalogue} entry, Christie’s recorded that it had been requested for the Met exhibition as “one of many centerpiece works”. Assuming the nameless new proprietor is keen to comply with a mortgage, it might dangle among the many highest firm in Van Gogh’s Cypresses.