- Les Arènes
Infobox Painting|
title=Les Arènes
artist=Vincent van Gogh
year=1888
type=Oil on canvas
height=73.5
width=91.5
museum=Hermitage Museum"Les Arènes" is a painting by Vincent van Gogh executed in
Arles , in November or December1888 , during the period of time whenPaul Gauguin was living with him in The Yellow House. The bullfight season in Arles that year started on Easter Sunday 1 April and ended on 21 October. ["L'Homme de Bronze", March 18, 1888, and October 21, 1888; see Roland Dorn 1990, p. 433. - "L'Homme de Bronze" and "Le Forum Républicain" were the two newspapers, edited in Arles in these years.] Van Gogh's painting is therefore not a study from nature but done from memory. Gauguin encouraged Van Gogh to work in the studio in this manner. The painting may not be finished as the paint is very thinly applied, and patches of bare jute show through in places.Gayford, Martin. "The Yellow House: Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Nine Turbulent Weeks in Arles", Fig Tree, Penguin, 2006, ISBN 0-670-91497-5. page 152]It seems that members of
the Roulin Family are depicted in this portrait/ [for example, Arnold, Wilfred N. "Vincent van Gogh: Chemicals, Crises, and Creativity," Birkhãuser, Boston, 1992. ISBN 0817636161. page 253] , and the woman in Arlésienne costume has the profile of Madame Ginoux. ]A matter of weeks after painting this canvas, at Christmas 1888, Van Gogh cut off part of his own ear. One of the many theories about this notorious incident is that the bullfights (or "bull games" as they are called in Arles) made a deep impression on Van Gogh, in particular the custom of severing one ear of a defeated bull. The victorious matador circles the arena displaying this prize to the crowd, before presenting it to a lady of his choice. [The theory is attributed to J. Olivier of
Saint Rémy de Provence , see for example, Lubin, Albert J. (1961). [http://www.pep-web.org/document.php?id=paq.030.0351a 'Vincent Van Gogh's Ear'] in the "Psychoanalytic Quarterly," 30:351-384, and by the same author "Stranger on the earth: A psychological biography of Vincent van Gogh," Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1972. ISBN 0030913527, page 158. The substance of the theory is described in a 1951 letter to V. W. van Gogh (the artist's nephew) ... letter A13] There is some doubt as to whether the bulls were killed in this fashion in Arles in Van Gogh's time. [Graetz, H. R., "The Symbolic Language of Vincent van Gogh," McGraw-Hill 1963]ee also
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Arles Amphitheatre Footnotes
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