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Hospital in Arles

Hospital at Arles is the subject of two paintings that Vincent van Gogh made of the hospital in which he stayed in December 1888 and again in January 1889. The hospital is located in Arles in southern France. One of the paintings is of the central garden between four buildings titled Garden of the Hospital in Arles (also known as the Courtyard of the Hospital at Arles); the other painting is of a ward within the hospital titled Ward of the Hospital in Arles. Van Gogh also painted Portrait of Dr. Félix Rey, a portrait of his physician while in the hospital.

Garden of the Hospital in Arles (F519)
ArtistVincent van Gogh
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions73.0 cm × 92.0 cm (28.7 in × 36.2 in)
LocationOskar Reinhart Collection, Winterthur, Switzerland

Arles edit

Arles is located in a region called Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, department of Bouches-du-Rhône in southern France. It is about 32 kilometres (20 mi) southeast of Nîmes.[1]

History edit

Arles became a successful port for trade in France during the Roman period. Many immigrants from North Africa came to Arles in the 17th and 18th centuries; their influence is reflected in many of the houses of the town that were built during that period.[2] Arles remained economically important for many years as a major port on the Rhône. The arrival of the railway in the 19th century eventually took away of much of the river trade, reducing the city's commercial business. Because Arles maintained Provençal charm it attracted artists, like Van Gogh.[3]

Van Gogh edit

 
The Yellow House (1888) Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (F464)

Van Gogh came to Arles on February 20, 1888 and initially stayed at the lodgings at Restaurant Carrel. Signs of spring were evident in the budding almond trees and of winter by the snow-covered landscape. To Van Gogh the scene seemed like a Japanese landscape.[4]

Arles was quite a different place than anywhere else he had lived. The climate was sunny, hot and dry and the local inhabitants had more of an appearance and sound of people from Spain. The "vivid colors and strong compositional outlines" of Provence led van Gogh to call the area "the Japan of the South."[5] In this time he produced more than 200 paintings including The Starry Night [Starry Night over the Rhone], Café de Nuit and The Sunflowers.[2]

Van Gogh had few friends in Arles, although through acquaintance with Joseph Roulin, a postman, and Ginoux, the owner of Cafe de la Gare where he next roomed, he made many portraits of the Roulin family and of Madame Ginoux. Part of his difficulty in making friends was his inability to master the Provençal dialect, "whole days go by without my speaking a single word to anyone, except to order my meals or coffee." In the beginning of his time in Arles, though, he was so enthused by the setting in Provence that the lack of connection with others hadn't troubled him. In October 1888 Paul Gauguin came to Arles and joined van Gogh in his rented rooms at The Yellow House.[6] Unfortunately many of the places that van Gogh had visited and painted were destroyed during bombing raids in World War II.[2]

Events leading up to stay at Arles hospital edit

 
Portrait of Doctor Félix Rey (F500, JH1659), oil on canvas 1889, Pushkin Museum.[7] Rey disliked his portrait and gave it away.[8]

Van Gogh's mental health deteriorated and he became alarmingly eccentric, culminating in an altercation with Paul Gauguin in December 1888 following which van Gogh cut off part of his own left ear.[9] He was then hospitalized in Arles twice over a few months. His condition was diagnosed by the hospital as "acute mania with generalised delirium".[10] Dr. Félix Rey, a young intern at the hospital, also suggested there might be "a kind of epilepsy" involved that he characterised as mental epilepsy.[11] Although some, such as Johanna van Gogh, Paul Signac and posthumous speculation by doctors Doiteau & Leroy have said that van Gogh just removed part of his earlobe and maybe a little more,[12] art historian Rita Wildegans maintains that without exception, all of the witnesses from Arles said that he removed the entire left ear.[13] In January 1889, he returned to the Yellow House where he was living, but spent the following month between hospital and home suffering from hallucinations and delusions that he was being poisoned. In March 1889, the police closed his house after a petition by 30 townspeople, who called him "fou roux" (the redheaded madman). Signac visited him in hospital and van Gogh was allowed home in his company. In April 1889, he moved into rooms owned by Dr. Félix Rey, after floods damaged paintings in his own home.[14][15] Around this time, he wrote, "Sometimes moods of indescribable anguish, sometimes moments when the veil of time and fatality of circumstances seemed to be torn apart for an instant." Finally in May 1889 he left Arles for the Saint-Paul asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence,[16] having understood his own mental fragility and with a desire to leave Arles.[17]

Arles Hospital edit

The courtyard of the former Arles hospital, now named "Espace Van Gogh," is a center for van Gogh's works, several of which are masterpieces.[18] The garden, framed on all four sides by buildings of the complex, is approached through arcades on the first floor. A circulation gallery is located on the first and second floors.[19]

The Old Hospital of Arles, also known as Hôtel-Dieu-Saint-Espirit, was built in the 16th and 17th centuries. Its main entrance was on Rue Dulau in Arles. In the early 16th century there were thirty-two charitable institutions serving the city. The archbishop of Arles decided to consolidate the institutions into one organization at the center of Arles. Construction was conducted over two centuries. During excavations remains were unearthed from a protohistory period [a period between prehistory and written history ] revealing an unknown part of the ancient urban framework, as well as a necropolis from the Roman esplanade.[19]

In 1835 three wings were built to accommodate a severe cholera epidemic. In the beginning of the 20th century the hospital was modified to bring it up to medical standards of the day. In 1974 the Joseph-Imbert Hospital was opened and many functions of the Old Hospital of Arles transferred to the new hospital. By 1986 all medical departments had vacated the buildings and the hospital became part of a restoration project to create a cultural and university center. The center includes "a media library, the public records, the International College of the Literary Translation (C.I.T.L.), the university radio, a vast showroom, as well as a few shops." Architects Denis Froidevaux and Jean-Louis Tétrel, chosen for the project, preserved historic features, such as the Roman esplanade.[19]

Funding by benefactors meant the hospital serviced all patient's needs, including abandoned children and orphans. Starting in 1664 nuns of the Order of Saint Augustin cared for the patients.[19]

Paintings edit

The Ward of Arles Hospital portrays the institution and the Garden of the Hospital in Arles the scene outside his hospital room window[20] or off of a balcony.[21] Van Gogh was also occasionally able to leave the hospital complex and paint the fields.[20]

Garden of the Hospital in Arles edit

Van Gogh made a drawing of the courtyard of the hospital in June 1889.[22] The vantage point for the painting was his room within the hospital.[23] Van Gogh's description and his painting of the garden allow for identification of its flowers, such as: blue bearded irises, forget-me-nots, oleander, pansies, primroses, and poppies. The original design of the courtyard as described by Van Gogh has been preserved. Radiating segments are surrounded by a "plante bande" now filled with irises. A difference between the painting and the garden is that van Gogh increased the size of the central fish garden for better composition.[24] Adept at using color to convey mood, the shades of blue and gold in the painting seem to suggest melancholy. The yellow, orange, red and green in the painting are not vivid shades seen in other work from Arles, such as Bedroom in Arles.[25]

Hospital in Arles
 
Garden of the Hospital in Arles
1889
The Oskar Reinhart Collection "Am Römerholz", Winterthur, Switzerland (F519)
 
Ward in the Hospital in Arles
1889
The Oskar Reinhart Collection "Am Römerholz", Winterthur, Switzerland (F646)
 
Portrait of Doctor Félix Rey
1889
Pushkin Museum, Moscow, Russia (F500)

Ward in the Hospital in Arles edit

In October 1889 van Gogh resumed painting of a fever ward titled Ward in the Hospital in Arles. The large study had been unattended for a while and van Gogh's interest was sparked when he read an article regarding Fyodor Dostoyevsky's book Souvenirs de la maison des morts ("Memories of the House of the Dead").[26]

Vincent described the painting to his sister Wil, "In the foreground a big black stove around which some grey and black forms of patients and then behind the very long ward paved in red with the two rows of white beds, the partitions white, but a lilac- or green-white, and the windows with pink curtains, with green curtains, and in the background two figures of nuns in black and white. The ceiling is violet with large beams."[26]

Debra Mancoff, author of Van Gogh's Flowers,[27] comments, "In his painting, Ward of Arles Hospital, the exaggerated length of the corridor and the nervous contours that delineate the figures of the patients express the emotional weight of his isolation and confinement."[20]

Portrait of Dr. Félix Rey edit

Van Gogh made a portrait of the physician who had treated his ear, Dr. Félix Rey, whom he had described in letters to his brother, Theo, as “brave, hardworking, and always helping people.” By January 17, 1889 Van Gogh had given the portrait to Rey as a keepsake.[28] Rey's mother reportedly deemed the portrait “hideous” and used to close a hole in the family's chicken coop. In 1901, an art dealer, possibly Lucien Molinard– who had received six Van Goghs to sell from Rey in 1900 [29] –acquired three paintings from Dr. Rey, including the portrait which was in the possession of Ambroise Vollard by 1903.[30] In 2016, the portrait was installed at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, with an estimated value of over $50 million.[31]

Drawings edit

Theo wrote of a drawing he received, "The hospital at Arles is outstanding, the butterfly and branches of eglantine are very beautiful too: simple in colour and very beautifully drawn."[32]

Oskar Reinhart collection edit

Both the hospital garden and ward paintings were held by Oskar Reinhart[33] from a powerful family in the banking and insurance industries. At his bequest his entire collection of 500 or more works went to the nation of Switzerland upon his death in 1965. The Oskar Reinhart Am Römerholz collection is located in Winterthur.[34]

See also edit

References edit

For books, also see the Bibliography using the author's last name.

  1. ^ "Where is Arles?". Arles Guide. Arles-guide.com. 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  2. ^ a b c "Arles History". Arles Guide. Arles-guide.com. 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  3. ^ "Arles". Provence Hideaways. Travel Writers Coop. 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  4. ^ Van Gogh; Leeuw, 353
  5. ^ (PDF). National Gallery of Art Picturing France (1830-1900). Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art: 121 (starting 1 of pdf). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-12.
  6. ^ Van Gogh; Leeuw, 385
  7. ^ Brooks, D. "Portrait of Doctor Félix Rey". The Vincent van Gogh Gallery, endorsed by Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. David Brooks (self-published). Retrieved 23 February 2011.
  8. ^ Brooks, D. "Dr. Félix Rey, interviewed by Max Braumann (1928)". The Vincent van Gogh Gallery, endorsed by Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. David Brooks (self-published). Retrieved 23 February 2011.
  9. ^ Maurer, 192
  10. ^ "Concordance, lists, bibliography: Documentation". Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. Van Gogh Museum. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
  11. ^ Naifeh and Smith (2011), 701 ff., 729, 749
  12. ^ Erickson, 106
  13. ^ Wildegans, Dr. R. . Dr. Rita Wildegans. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2011-04-27"It can be said that with the exception of the sister-in-law Johanna van Gogh-Bonger, who had family-related reasons for playing down the injury, not a single witness speaks of a severed earlobe. On the contrary, the mutually independent statements by the principal witness Paul Gauguin, the prostitute who was given the ear, the gendarme who was on duty in the red-light district, the investigating police officer and the local newspaper report, accord with the evidence that the artist's unfortunate "self-mutilation" involves the entire (left) ear. The existing handwritten and clearly worded medical reports by three different physicians, all of whom observed and treated Vincent van Gogh over an extended period of time in Arles as well as in the Saint-Paul asylum in Saint-Rémy ought to provide ultimate proof of the fact that the artist was missing an entire ear and not just an earlobe."{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  14. ^ Pickvance (1986). Chronology, 239–242
  15. ^ Tralbaut (1981), 265–273
  16. ^ Hughes, 145
  17. ^ Maurer, 86
  18. ^ Fisher, 563
  19. ^ a b c d . Visiter, Places of Interest. Arles Office de Tourisme. Archived from the original on 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  20. ^ a b c Mancoff, D (2006–2011). "Ward of Arles Hospital by Vincent van Gogh". HowStuffWorks. Publications International, Ltd. Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  21. ^ Fell, 28
  22. ^ Harrison, R, ed. (2011). "Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh, Saint-Rémy, 17 or 18 June 1889". Van Gogh Letters. WebExhibits. Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  23. ^ Harris, B (2008). "A visit to Van Gogh's Arles". bob.harris.com. Retrieved 2011-04-30" See photo that shows the vantage point that matches exactly to the painting."{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  24. ^ Fell, 30
  25. ^ Acton, 109-110
  26. ^ a b Harrison, R, ed. (2011). "Vincent van Gogh. Letter to Wilhelmina van Gogh. Written c. 20–22 October 1889 in Saint-Rémy". Van Gogh Letters. WebExhibits. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  27. ^ Mancoff
  28. ^ Van Gogh; Suh, 242
  29. ^ Feilchenfeldt, Walter (2013). Vincent Van Gogh: The Years in France: Complete Paintings 1886-1890. Philip Wilson. p. 306. ISBN 978-1781300190. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  30. ^ Khoshbin, Shahram; Katz, Joel T. (2015). "Van Gogh's Physician". Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 2 (3): ofv088. doi:10.1093/ofid/ofv088. PMC 4539511. PMID 26288801.
  31. ^ . van gogh studio (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 23 October 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  32. ^ Van Gogh; Leeuw, 447
  33. ^ "Collection of Oskar Reinhart Collection 'Am Römerholz'". Van Gogh Paintings. Van Gogh Gallery. 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  34. ^ Simonis; Johnstone; Williams, 209

External links edit

  • Oskar Reinhart Collection am Roemerholz, Winterthur

Bibliography edit

  • Acton, M (197). Looking Back at Paintings. Oxon and New York. ISBN 0-415-14889-8.
  • Erickson, K (1998). At Eternity's Gate: The Spiritual Vision Of Vincent van Gogh. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdsman Publishing. ISBN 0-8028-3856-1.
  • Fell, D (1997) [1994]. The Impressionist Garden. London: Frances Lincoln Limited. ISBN 0-7112-1148-5.
  • Fisher, R, ed (2011). Fodor's France 2011. Toronto and New York: Fodor's Travel, division of Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-0473-7.
  • Hughes, Robert. Nothing If Not Critical. London: The Harvill Press, 1990 ISBN 0-14-016524-X
  • Hulsker, Jan. The Complete Van Gogh. Oxford: Phaidon, 1980. ISBN 0-7148-2028-8
  • Mancoff, D (1999). Van Gogh's Flowers. London: Frances Lincoln Limited. ISBN 978-0-7112-2908-2.
  • Maurer, N (1999) [1998]. The Pursuit of Spiritual Wisdom: The Thought and Art of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin. Cranbury: Associated University Presses. ISBN 0-8386-3749-3.
  • Naifeh, Steven; Smith, Gregory White. Van Gogh: The Life. Profile Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84668-010-6
  • Pickvance, Ronald. Van Gogh In Saint-Rémy and Auvers (exh. cat. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), Abrams, New York 1986. ISBN 0-87099-477-8
  • Simonis, D; Johnstone, S; Williams, N (2006). Switzerland. Lonely Planet Publications.
  • Tralbaut, Marc Edo. Vincent van Gogh, le mal aimé. Edita, Lausanne (French) & Macmillan, London 1969 (English); reissued by Macmillan, 1974 and by Alpine Fine Art Collections, 1981. ISBN 0-933516-31-2.
  • Van Gogh, V and Leeuw, R (1997) [1996]. van Crimpen, H, Berends-Albert, M. ed. The Letters of Vincent van Gogh. London and other locations: Penguin Books.
  • Van Gogh, V; Suh, H (2006). Vincent van Gogh: A Self-portrait in Art and Letters. New York: Black Dog and Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 1-57912-586-7.

hospital, arles, hospital, arles, subject, paintings, that, vincent, gogh, made, hospital, which, stayed, december, 1888, again, january, 1889, hospital, located, arles, southern, france, paintings, central, garden, between, four, buildings, titled, garden, al. Hospital at Arles is the subject of two paintings that Vincent van Gogh made of the hospital in which he stayed in December 1888 and again in January 1889 The hospital is located in Arles in southern France One of the paintings is of the central garden between four buildings titled Garden of the Hospital in Arles also known as the Courtyard of the Hospital at Arles the other painting is of a ward within the hospital titled Ward of the Hospital in Arles Van Gogh also painted Portrait of Dr Felix Rey a portrait of his physician while in the hospital Garden of the Hospital in Arles F519 ArtistVincent van GoghMediumOil on canvasDimensions73 0 cm 92 0 cm 28 7 in 36 2 in LocationOskar Reinhart Collection Winterthur Switzerland Contents 1 Arles 1 1 History 1 2 Van Gogh 1 3 Events leading up to stay at Arles hospital 1 4 Arles Hospital 2 Paintings 2 1 Garden of the Hospital in Arles 2 2 Ward in the Hospital in Arles 3 Portrait of Dr Felix Rey 4 Drawings 5 Oskar Reinhart collection 6 See also 7 References 8 External links 9 BibliographyArles editArles is located in a region called Provence Alpes Cote d Azur department of Bouches du Rhone in southern France It is about 32 kilometres 20 mi southeast of Nimes 1 History edit Arles became a successful port for trade in France during the Roman period Many immigrants from North Africa came to Arles in the 17th and 18th centuries their influence is reflected in many of the houses of the town that were built during that period 2 Arles remained economically important for many years as a major port on the Rhone The arrival of the railway in the 19th century eventually took away of much of the river trade reducing the city s commercial business Because Arles maintained Provencal charm it attracted artists like Van Gogh 3 Van Gogh edit nbsp The Yellow House 1888 Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam F464 Van Gogh came to Arles on February 20 1888 and initially stayed at the lodgings at Restaurant Carrel Signs of spring were evident in the budding almond trees and of winter by the snow covered landscape To Van Gogh the scene seemed like a Japanese landscape 4 Arles was quite a different place than anywhere else he had lived The climate was sunny hot and dry and the local inhabitants had more of an appearance and sound of people from Spain The vivid colors and strong compositional outlines of Provence led van Gogh to call the area the Japan of the South 5 In this time he produced more than 200 paintings including The Starry Night Starry Night over the Rhone Cafe de Nuit and The Sunflowers 2 Van Gogh had few friends in Arles although through acquaintance with Joseph Roulin a postman and Ginoux the owner of Cafe de la Gare where he next roomed he made many portraits of the Roulin family and of Madame Ginoux Part of his difficulty in making friends was his inability to master the Provencal dialect whole days go by without my speaking a single word to anyone except to order my meals or coffee In the beginning of his time in Arles though he was so enthused by the setting in Provence that the lack of connection with others hadn t troubled him In October 1888 Paul Gauguin came to Arles and joined van Gogh in his rented rooms at The Yellow House 6 Unfortunately many of the places that van Gogh had visited and painted were destroyed during bombing raids in World War II 2 Events leading up to stay at Arles hospital edit nbsp Portrait of Doctor Felix Rey F500 JH1659 oil on canvas 1889 Pushkin Museum 7 Rey disliked his portrait and gave it away 8 Van Gogh s mental health deteriorated and he became alarmingly eccentric culminating in an altercation with Paul Gauguin in December 1888 following which van Gogh cut off part of his own left ear 9 He was then hospitalized in Arles twice over a few months His condition was diagnosed by the hospital as acute mania with generalised delirium 10 Dr Felix Rey a young intern at the hospital also suggested there might be a kind of epilepsy involved that he characterised as mental epilepsy 11 Although some such as Johanna van Gogh Paul Signac and posthumous speculation by doctors Doiteau amp Leroy have said that van Gogh just removed part of his earlobe and maybe a little more 12 art historian Rita Wildegans maintains that without exception all of the witnesses from Arles said that he removed the entire left ear 13 In January 1889 he returned to the Yellow House where he was living but spent the following month between hospital and home suffering from hallucinations and delusions that he was being poisoned In March 1889 the police closed his house after a petition by 30 townspeople who called him fou roux the redheaded madman Signac visited him in hospital and van Gogh was allowed home in his company In April 1889 he moved into rooms owned by Dr Felix Rey after floods damaged paintings in his own home 14 15 Around this time he wrote Sometimes moods of indescribable anguish sometimes moments when the veil of time and fatality of circumstances seemed to be torn apart for an instant Finally in May 1889 he left Arles for the Saint Paul asylum in Saint Remy de Provence 16 having understood his own mental fragility and with a desire to leave Arles 17 Arles Hospital edit The courtyard of the former Arles hospital now named Espace Van Gogh is a center for van Gogh s works several of which are masterpieces 18 The garden framed on all four sides by buildings of the complex is approached through arcades on the first floor A circulation gallery is located on the first and second floors 19 The Old Hospital of Arles also known as Hotel Dieu Saint Espirit was built in the 16th and 17th centuries Its main entrance was on Rue Dulau in Arles In the early 16th century there were thirty two charitable institutions serving the city The archbishop of Arles decided to consolidate the institutions into one organization at the center of Arles Construction was conducted over two centuries During excavations remains were unearthed from a protohistory period a period between prehistory and written history revealing an unknown part of the ancient urban framework as well as a necropolis from the Roman esplanade 19 In 1835 three wings were built to accommodate a severe cholera epidemic In the beginning of the 20th century the hospital was modified to bring it up to medical standards of the day In 1974 the Joseph Imbert Hospital was opened and many functions of the Old Hospital of Arles transferred to the new hospital By 1986 all medical departments had vacated the buildings and the hospital became part of a restoration project to create a cultural and university center The center includes a media library the public records the International College of the Literary Translation C I T L the university radio a vast showroom as well as a few shops Architects Denis Froidevaux and Jean Louis Tetrel chosen for the project preserved historic features such as the Roman esplanade 19 Funding by benefactors meant the hospital serviced all patient s needs including abandoned children and orphans Starting in 1664 nuns of the Order of Saint Augustin cared for the patients 19 Paintings editThe Ward of Arles Hospital portrays the institution and the Garden of the Hospital in Arles the scene outside his hospital room window 20 or off of a balcony 21 Van Gogh was also occasionally able to leave the hospital complex and paint the fields 20 Garden of the Hospital in Arles edit Van Gogh made a drawing of the courtyard of the hospital in June 1889 22 The vantage point for the painting was his room within the hospital 23 Van Gogh s description and his painting of the garden allow for identification of its flowers such as blue bearded irises forget me nots oleander pansies primroses and poppies The original design of the courtyard as described by Van Gogh has been preserved Radiating segments are surrounded by a plante bande now filled with irises A difference between the painting and the garden is that van Gogh increased the size of the central fish garden for better composition 24 Adept at using color to convey mood the shades of blue and gold in the painting seem to suggest melancholy The yellow orange red and green in the painting are not vivid shades seen in other work from Arles such as Bedroom in Arles 25 Hospital in Arles nbsp Garden of the Hospital in Arles1889The Oskar Reinhart Collection Am Romerholz Winterthur Switzerland F519 nbsp Ward in the Hospital in Arles1889The Oskar Reinhart Collection Am Romerholz Winterthur Switzerland F646 nbsp Portrait of Doctor Felix Rey1889Pushkin Museum Moscow Russia F500 Ward in the Hospital in Arles edit In October 1889 van Gogh resumed painting of a fever ward titled Ward in the Hospital in Arles The large study had been unattended for a while and van Gogh s interest was sparked when he read an article regarding Fyodor Dostoyevsky s book Souvenirs de la maison des morts Memories of the House of the Dead 26 Vincent described the painting to his sister Wil In the foreground a big black stove around which some grey and black forms of patients and then behind the very long ward paved in red with the two rows of white beds the partitions white but a lilac or green white and the windows with pink curtains with green curtains and in the background two figures of nuns in black and white The ceiling is violet with large beams 26 Debra Mancoff author of Van Gogh s Flowers 27 comments In his painting Ward of Arles Hospital the exaggerated length of the corridor and the nervous contours that delineate the figures of the patients express the emotional weight of his isolation and confinement 20 Portrait of Dr Felix Rey editVan Gogh made a portrait of the physician who had treated his ear Dr Felix Rey whom he had described in letters to his brother Theo as brave hardworking and always helping people By January 17 1889 Van Gogh had given the portrait to Rey as a keepsake 28 Rey s mother reportedly deemed the portrait hideous and used to close a hole in the family s chicken coop In 1901 an art dealer possibly Lucien Molinard who had received six Van Goghs to sell from Rey in 1900 29 acquired three paintings from Dr Rey including the portrait which was in the possession of Ambroise Vollard by 1903 30 In 2016 the portrait was installed at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts with an estimated value of over 50 million 31 Drawings editTheo wrote of a drawing he received The hospital at Arles is outstanding the butterfly and branches of eglantine are very beautiful too simple in colour and very beautifully drawn 32 nbsp Garden of Hospital in ArlesApril 1889Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam F1467 Oskar Reinhart collection editBoth the hospital garden and ward paintings were held by Oskar Reinhart 33 from a powerful family in the banking and insurance industries At his bequest his entire collection of 500 or more works went to the nation of Switzerland upon his death in 1965 The Oskar Reinhart Am Romerholz collection is located in Winterthur 34 See also editList of works by Vincent van GoghReferences editFor books also see the Bibliography using the author s last name Where is Arles Arles Guide Arles guide com 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 29 a b c Arles History Arles Guide Arles guide com 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 29 Arles Provence Hideaways Travel Writers Coop 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 29 Van Gogh Leeuw 353 Effects of the Sun in Provence PDF National Gallery of Art Picturing France 1830 1900 Washington D C National Gallery of Art 121 starting 1 of pdf Archived from the original PDF on 2011 05 12 Van Gogh Leeuw 385 Brooks D Portrait of Doctor Felix Rey The Vincent van Gogh Gallery endorsed by Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam David Brooks self published Retrieved 23 February 2011 Brooks D Dr Felix Rey interviewed by Max Braumann 1928 The Vincent van Gogh Gallery endorsed by Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam David Brooks self published Retrieved 23 February 2011 Maurer 192 Concordance lists bibliography Documentation Vincent van Gogh The Letters Van Gogh Museum Retrieved 16 February 2012 Naifeh and Smith 2011 701 ff 729 749 Erickson 106 Wildegans Dr R Van Gogh s Ear Dr Rita Wildegans Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 04 27 It can be said that with the exception of the sister in law Johanna van Gogh Bonger who had family related reasons for playing down the injury not a single witness speaks of a severed earlobe On the contrary the mutually independent statements by the principal witness Paul Gauguin the prostitute who was given the ear the gendarme who was on duty in the red light district the investigating police officer and the local newspaper report accord with the evidence that the artist s unfortunate self mutilation involves the entire left ear The existing handwritten and clearly worded medical reports by three different physicians all of whom observed and treated Vincent van Gogh over an extended period of time in Arles as well as in the Saint Paul asylum in Saint Remy ought to provide ultimate proof of the fact that the artist was missing an entire ear and not just an earlobe a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Pickvance 1986 Chronology 239 242 Tralbaut 1981 265 273 Hughes 145 Maurer 86 Fisher 563 a b c d Espace Van Gogh Visiter Places of Interest Arles Office de Tourisme Archived from the original on 2012 03 23 Retrieved 2011 04 29 a b c Mancoff D 2006 2011 Ward of Arles Hospital by Vincent van Gogh HowStuffWorks Publications International Ltd Retrieved 2011 04 30 Fell 28 Harrison R ed 2011 Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh Saint Remy 17 or 18 June 1889 Van Gogh Letters WebExhibits Retrieved 2011 04 30 Harris B 2008 A visit to Van Gogh s Arles bob harris com Retrieved 2011 04 30 See photo that shows the vantage point that matches exactly to the painting a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Fell 30 Acton 109 110 a b Harrison R ed 2011 Vincent van Gogh Letter to Wilhelmina van Gogh Written c 20 22 October 1889 in Saint Remy Van Gogh Letters WebExhibits Retrieved 2011 04 29 Mancoff Van Gogh Suh 242 Feilchenfeldt Walter 2013 Vincent Van Gogh The Years in France Complete Paintings 1886 1890 Philip Wilson p 306 ISBN 978 1781300190 Retrieved 1 October 2018 Khoshbin Shahram Katz Joel T 2015 Van Gogh s Physician Open Forum Infectious Diseases 2 3 ofv088 doi 10 1093 ofid ofv088 PMC 4539511 PMID 26288801 Portrait of Doctor Felix Rey Oil Painting Reproduction 1889 van gogh studio in Dutch Archived from the original on 23 October 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Van Gogh Leeuw 447 Collection of Oskar Reinhart Collection Am Romerholz Van Gogh Paintings Van Gogh Gallery 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 30 Simonis Johnstone Williams 209External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arles Oskar Reinhart Collection am Roemerholz Winterthur Old Hospital of Arles Arles tourist office website Van Gogh Tour Arles Office of TourismBibliography editActon M 197 Looking Back at Paintings Oxon and New York ISBN 0 415 14889 8 Erickson K 1998 At Eternity s Gate The Spiritual Vision Of Vincent van Gogh Grand Rapids MI William B Eerdsman Publishing ISBN 0 8028 3856 1 Fell D 1997 1994 The Impressionist Garden London Frances Lincoln Limited ISBN 0 7112 1148 5 Fisher R ed 2011 Fodor s France 2011 Toronto and New York Fodor s Travel division of Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 0473 7 Hughes Robert Nothing If Not Critical London The Harvill Press 1990 ISBN 0 14 016524 X Hulsker Jan The Complete Van Gogh Oxford Phaidon 1980 ISBN 0 7148 2028 8 Mancoff D 1999 Van Gogh s Flowers London Frances Lincoln Limited ISBN 978 0 7112 2908 2 Maurer N 1999 1998 The Pursuit of Spiritual Wisdom The Thought and Art of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin Cranbury Associated University Presses ISBN 0 8386 3749 3 Naifeh Steven Smith Gregory White Van Gogh The Life Profile Books 2011 ISBN 978 1 84668 010 6 Pickvance Ronald Van Gogh In Saint Remy and Auvers exh cat Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Abrams New York 1986 ISBN 0 87099 477 8 Simonis D Johnstone S Williams N 2006 Switzerland Lonely Planet Publications Tralbaut Marc Edo Vincent van Gogh le mal aime Edita Lausanne French amp Macmillan London 1969 English reissued by Macmillan 1974 and by Alpine Fine Art Collections 1981 ISBN 0 933516 31 2 Van Gogh V and Leeuw R 1997 1996 van Crimpen H Berends Albert M ed The Letters of Vincent van Gogh London and other locations Penguin Books Van Gogh V Suh H 2006 Vincent van Gogh A Self portrait in Art and Letters New York Black Dog and Leventhal Publishers ISBN 1 57912 586 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hospital in Arles amp oldid 1217650738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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