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Seeing Provence through Van Gogh's eyes

By Rick Steves, Tribune Content Agency on

Visiting the French city of Arles, it's easy to absorb Vincent van Gogh's story. In February 1888, the Dutch artist left Paris for Provence. Coming from the gray skies and flat lands of the north, he was bowled over by the sun, bright colors, rugged landscape and raw people in southern France. He painted furiously for the next two years, cranking out a masterpiece every few days.

Though the Fondation Van Gogh gallery in Arles regularly displays at least one work on loan from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, the city owns none of the paintings he created here. But you can walk the same streets he walked and see places he painted, marked by 10 steel-and-concrete "easels" with photos of the paintings alongside the view of that painting's subject. It's a fascinating then-and-now comparison (the tourist information office offers a map to find them). I like to do a north-to-south easel tour through the city's compact core. (Several other easels are less central, but easily located.)

I begin at the "Yellow House" easel on the north side of Place Lamartine, where Van Gogh rented a small house (destroyed in 1944). Freezing Arles was buttoned up tight, so he worked inside, painting still lifes and self-portraits -- anything to keep his brush moving.

In late March, spring finally arrived. Donning his straw hat, Van Gogh set up his easel outdoors and painted blossoming fruit trees, peasants sowing and reaping and windblown fields, all lit by a brilliant sun.

A block from Place Lamartine at the river wall is the "Starry Night Over the Rhone" easel. Van Gogh was the first to paint outside after dark, adapting his straw hat to hold candles (which must have blown the minds of locals). As his paintings progressed, the stars became more animated -- like Van Gogh himself. (The more famous "Starry Night" was painted later in St-Remy.)

At the Roman Arena, an easel captures Van Gogh's impressions -- with the bull barely visible. He spent more time studying the people than watching the bullfights. He also spent many a sunny day painting the leafy Jardin d'Ete, where you'll find an easel that shows Van Gogh's painting of a tree-lined path.

 

In October, lonely Van Gogh -- who dreamed of making Arles a magnet for fellow artists -- persuaded his friend Paul Gauguin to come. He decorated Gauguin's room with several humble canvases of sunflowers (now some of the world's priciest paintings). Their plan was for Gauguin to be the "dean" of a new art school in Arles, and Van Gogh its instructor-in-chief. At first, the two spent days side by side painting, and hitting bars and brothels at night. "Cafe Terrace at Night," shown on an easel at Place du Forum near Cafe la Nuit (now an overpriced tourist trap), captures the glow of an absinthe buzz.

After two months together, the two artists clashed. The night of December 23, they were drinking absinthe at the cafe when Van Gogh suddenly went ballistic. He threw his glass at Gauguin. Gauguin left. Walking through Place Victor Hugo, Gauguin heard footsteps behind him and turned to see Van Gogh coming at him, brandishing a razor. Gauguin quickly fled town. The local paper reported what happened next: "At 11:30 p.m., Vincent Vaugogh (sic), painter from Holland, appeared at the brothel at no. 1, asked for Rachel, and gave her his cut-off earlobe, saying, 'Treasure this precious object.' Then he vanished." He woke up the next morning at home with his head wrapped in a bloody towel and his earlobe missing. Was Van Gogh emulating a successful matador, whose prize is cutting off the bull's ear?

Van Gogh was admitted into the hospital -- today's Espace Van Gogh cultural center. An easel in the courtyard there displays his painting of the garden. Arles' citizens demanded that the mad Dutchman be kept under medical supervision, but he was allowed to leave during the day to paint as therapy.

In spring 1889, Van Gogh admitted himself to the St. Paul Monastery and Hospital in St-Remy-de-Provence. He spent a year there and produced more than 100 paintings. With thick, swirling brushstrokes and surreal colors, he made his placid surroundings throb with restless energy. Today, at the hospital, you can see a replica of his room and studio, plus many scenes he painted in situ -- the courtyard, the plane trees, the view out of the upstairs window of nearby fields and the rugged Alpilles mountains.

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(c)2016 RICK STEVES DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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