Vincent Van Gogh's Starry Night at the MoMA | Artrageous with Nate

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[MUSIC PLAYING] NATE: We're here at the Museum of Modern Art, one of my favorite art museums. We're going to get a chance to see some of the most famous works of art. Let's get inside and get started. Follow me. This episode is funded by The Glick Fund and the Christel DeHaan Family Foundation, who inspire philanthropy and creativity. We are here with Larissa Bailiff. Thank you so much for your time, for coming out here to talk to us about-- and your title here at the MoMA would be? I'm an educator, Nate. And I love educators, so this is fantastic. So, thanks so much. Talking about this, I mean, I think I know this painting, right? This is Starry Night, so yeah. So can you tell us a little bit about just what you know about it? Especially how it got into the museum and the time frame and-- yeah, just let me know about it. Well, it's a work from the late 19th century. It was painted in 1889 by Vincent van Gogh. And we'll talk more about him. In terms of coming into the museum, it was a gift from one of our three founders. And we were founded by three women. And she gave this to us, I believe, in 1941. NATE: I mean, where was he at when he painted this? What was going on? Sure, absolutely. He painted this when he was in Saint Remy, France. And it's painted at the hospital where he put himself to take care of himself and recuperate. And he had two rooms there. And he could look outside the windows. He could walk the grounds. And so, it is essentially what he might have seen looking out one of those windows. But of course, he's done many different things to it, combined art history, his emotions. And that's what makes it so special. NATE: Where did he get the influence of just wanting to do so much with nature? In terms of nature, that's something that he loved from the get go. And he talks about it in his letters to Theo, memories of walking around and finding different little animals and studying nature and plants and sketching them from a very early time. One thing that we get to see when we're here is texture. And the other is the incredible amount of color, which is amazing. Do you know where he got some of these influences and what pressed him to want to use so much paint? I think that's one of the most amazing things about Vincent van Gogh. Because he tried on different styles and was exposed to a lot of art history, but he really settled upon this-- what we kind of call-- parallel brushwork. Although there's nothing really parallel about it. It's moving and undulating. But very, very thickly encrusted, a lot of impasto, a lot of paint on the surface. And it seems to have been something that allowed him to really express himself, to really pour himself into the paint. And that texture, I mean it's almost haptic and touchable. And yet, in places, we can see the bare canvas. So it's not completely covered. It's where he's moved to paint and express himself. In terms of the colors, I mean, they're bright and vibrant. And a lot of that comes out of just having been in Paris, living with his brother in 1886 to 1888. He was exposed to Impressionism and what the new artists were doing and using vibrant paint colors. One thing that they were very influenced by were Japanese woodblock prints with wide swatches of color. And I think that that comes across in here, that it's not boring colors. It's not staid. And it's not even a night sky that's so dark that we can't see anything. It's ablaze with blues and complimentary orange-yellows. And there's color all throughout. There's not just one single sense of blue, yellow, white. Now, you've told me a little bit-- maybe math or science behind the way the sky looks? Sure. So just to say this has been such a fascinating and compelling work of art that all kinds of different people have analyzed it, from psychologists to astronomers. And more recently, mathematicians and people involved in physics have really begun to think about how van Gogh may have had his finger on the pulse. The pulse of light, for instance. And that somehow he was able to convey or to translate really complicated concepts, like the concept of turbulence. So we know that he's made thousands of paintings and hundreds and hundreds of sketches. So why is-- I mean, this is iconic. I would argue probably one of the most popular paintings in the world. Why was it-- I mean, he wasn't popular. He couldn't sell them. So how did-- what changed? What happened? I mean, he only sold one painting in his lifetime. And that was to a friend's sister, who appreciated his work. And people really misunderstood him. But as you said, he was extremely prolific, putting his ideas out there in letters and sketches and paintings. But to why this is so compelling-- and in fact, he didn't consider it a masterpiece as we do today. But I think people are drawn to it for all different kinds of reasons. Partially because we understand more about his life now and we know that this was a really difficult time to be in an asylum. A vulnerable time, where he's expressing his emotions. But also, the compelling night sky that fills up almost all of the composition and draws us in again with this brushwork that is just and undulating. And so different from what any painter was creating at the time, when surfaces were really polished and we were supposed to understand the meaning and it was clear cut, a narrative, a story. That's what you were supposed to get. Or to understand that it's a direct transcript of what you see outside. And he is able to blend-- I would say magically or mystically-- this amazing picture for us. Here he is at his lowest point almost humanly possible, making his greatest work. But is there any kind of religious connotation with being at church? I don't know if there's any symbolism there. Absolutely. So, you know, there are so many things going on in this work that we could look to and think about, in relation to his own experience and his own life. So he was a very religious person, felt very spiritual. And we do have a church there. But interestingly, this is not what a church in Saint Remy would have looked like. In fact, the church that he would have seen or encountered had a dome. And this has a steeple. And yet, it's in the center bottom of the picture, so it has importance there. He puts it in. And many people think that it's a memory of the parsonage that his father ran when van Gogh was growing up. So again, he comes from a very spiritual background. But he has to interpret that for himself. Van Gogh, with his love of nature, came to, I think, believe that there is spirituality in everything, every blade of grass. And I bring that up because he's reading Walt Whitman and many other writers and poets in many different languages. But religion is there, imbued in-- or faith, I should say. Spirituality in all aspects of this, in the beauty of things. Since we're looking at the stars and it's called Starry Night, I just wanted to point close to particularly this star here, which seems to be one of the most important for him. And he believed it was the morning star. We can tell-- not from the naked eye, per se, although if you look really close, you'll see a lot of canvas-- that he painted the blue and left blank canvas. And then painted the bright colors of the star and moved out and out. Wow, yeah. That's one thing I love about being at the museum. I mean, I can see the book and sort of-- but now, I could come at this angle and really see what you're saying, how he applied the different layers. Absolutely. Well, thank you so much for your time. This is amazing, to get a few glimpses of what this work did. Thanks, Nate. It's my pleasure and one of my favorite paintings the Museum of Modern Art. NATE: Click on the right to get yourself some more Artrageous episodes. And click on the left and the circle icon to subscribe. And please, I would love to connect with you on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter at Artrageousnate. Hey, everybody. Have a great day and be Artrageous.
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Channel: Artrageous with Nate
Views: 273,167
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Vang Gogh starry night at Moma, vincent van gogh starry night, vincent van gogh, art history impressionism, history of starry night painting, science of starry night, van gogh, art, starry night, moma, arles france, arles, saint remey france, saint-rémy-de-provence, van gogh museum, impressionism, artrageous with nate, art history, creativity, pbs digital studios, Crash Course, Crash Course John Green, Art Assignment John Green, museum of modern art, art education, youtube, video, nyc
Id: V7EAOnVkdbc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 7min 54sec (474 seconds)
Published: Mon Aug 28 2017
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