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Van Gogh's "Self-Portrait With A Straw Hat" Essay

Van Gogh's "Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat" (1887) With an oeuvre of over 2000 works Van Gogh's artistic passion matched the intensity of his religious fervor. Religion and art were, essentially, the basis of Van Gogh's life. And the history of his life is, in a way, a history of modern Europe; in another way it is a history of the prelude to 20th century modern art; and in another way it is a lesson on the loss that Europe had suffered when it broke with its religious heritage and embarked on a course of Industrialization. This paper will discuss the meaning of Van Gogh's 1887 Self-Portrait and how it reflects deeper passions within Van Gogh -- passions that ran contrary to the modernization going on around him.

Religion was always very important to Van Gogh, and though the subject may seem incidental in his self-portraits, the sheer fact that he painted so many portraits of himself reveals a kind of fastidiousness in his person, which might be described as religious. Indeed, Van Gogh spent most of his youth attempting to pursue a spiritual course. When that finally failed, he took to art and devoted the rest of his life to capturing the mysterious wonder that he saw all around him.

However, his self-portraits reveal a struggle within himself: they show a man with a kind of haunted and hunted expression. The 1887 Self-Portrait (one of nearly three dozen completed over his brief career) was composed just before he cut off his own ear in a fit of madness while...

Here, one sees a troubled look in the artist's eyes, and the brush strokes all seem to point to the fierceness of those eyes, as though the pain that Van Gogh felt in his soul were radiating outward from his eyes in the colorful brushstrokes on the canvas.
As Jan Hulsker notes, "every color used to paint Van Gogh's person and clothing finds its pair in his surroundings." The colors of course unify schematically the subject (Van Gogh) with the surroundings -- but in another sense, one can view the 1887 Self-Portrait as an attempt by the artist to see himself as one who finally -- disfigured fit in with the world which had no place for him. Here he now saw himself clearly, wholly, and directly -- and the portrait that he produced is both cold and warm, negative and positive, troubled and yet content.

The picture, obviously, is not directly about any of society's problems at the times. But some of the problems may be inferred by the subject, which is the artist himself. Here he is in his straw hat -- a sign of the countryside that drew him away from Paris, where he spent some time learning the art of the Impressionists, falling in love, and painting various city scenes. This picture was painted during his Parisian sojourn. It is, however, forward looking -- the eyes propel the viewer to some distant sight, unseen, off canvas and perhaps in the future. Perhaps this future object is what is really at the…

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Works Cited

Hulsker, J. The Complete Van Gogh. NY H.N. Abrams, 1980. Print.

Johnson, Paul. Art: A New History. NY: HarperCollins, 2003. Print.

Van Gogh, Vincent. Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat, 1887. Metropolitan Museum.
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Self-Portrait With Straw Hat Journal by Vincent Van Gogh -- Self-portrait So many artists have painted self-portraits. Self-portraiture requires the artist to turn his inner eye upon his raw soul. I paint myself as an observer of my physical qualities. But I am also in search of understanding myself. Why do I feel so alienated from the world, even from my friend Gauguin and my brother Theo? My quest to understand myself

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