Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh is a lively painting that illustrates the stars, the moon, the night sky, a village, and a tree. Looking at this painting, you can see swirls of various colors, which include shades of blues, greens, yellows, whites, browns, and blacks. The stars are yellow swirls mixed with white and they are placed in the night sky, which consists of blues, greens, and blacks. The moon is depicted as a crescent moon circled by a white ring of swirls in the top right corner of the painting. The brown and black tree is placed in the foreground of the paining. The tree is bare and has many curved and pointed limbs extending toward the sky. The village is placed in the distance and has bits of yellow in the windows, as if people …show more content…
Unity was created in this painting because he made everything feel related and fit well together. Also, the various shades of different colors and the various kinds of brushstrokes used generate great variety in this painting. The balance of this painting is asymmetrical, since there is a village and a moon on one side, a cypress tree on the other side, and stars scattered in the night sky. Since Van Gogh used such electric colors in order to emphasize the sky, it is obvious that the focal point is the sky, which includes the stars and the moon. Also, the village and hills seem to subordinate this painting so that the sky is highlighted. This painting has directional forces, such as the swirls used in the sky. These swirls encourage the viewer to follow the swirls across the painting and keep one interested. Repetition and rhythm can be found in this painting as well. For example, the swirled brushstrokes in the sky are the same and the curved brushstrokes in the hills and cypress tree are the same. This painting also uses proportional differences, which include the largeness of the cypress tree and stars compared to the small village and the hills in the
During Vincent’s time at the Saint-Rémy sanatorium, he painted one of his renowned landscape paintings, Starry Night in 1889. The choice of medium used was oil paint where Vincent famously displayed his impasto technique on the hemp material canvas. He wrote to his brother about his inspiration stating, “This morning I saw the country from my window a long time before sunrise, with nothing but the morning star, which looked very big” . Hence, you can infer that Starry Night was painted from the view of Vincent’s room where the background of the composition depicts the night scenery of a small and peaceful village, which juxtaposes the movements of the brightly lit sky. However, Vincent did not exactly follow what he saw from his window but painted from what he saw in his imagination, following the likes of Gauguin.
In Vincent van Gogh’s renowned painting, The Starry Night, the vast night sky dominates the background space of the painting. The brightness of the eleven stars, with their yellow celestial glow illuminate the night, blanketing the sleepy, rural village below. Far from the glaring lights of the urban landscape, the pureness of the stars’ radiance floats effortlessly above, lulling the people of the quaint village to sleep. Hovering in the upper right hand corner is a brilliant orange crescent moon, which contributes to the warm mood and aesthetic value of the piece. Mountains, rolling hills and wheat fields surround the cottages as though nature itself is getting a sleepy respite from a long day, much like the townspeople. Toward the forefront of the painting are
Van Gogh used the seven elements of art in “starry night”. In the swirls in the sky he used lines. He used color in the sky and in the town. You can see the texture in the lush trees and spiraling stars. Compare the cypress tree with the church steeple there is space between them. There is also value from the sky with different shades of blue. He used form in the town. Van Gogh used form in the town.
Post-Impressionists left behind the Impressionist doctrine of truth to nature. Rather, they chose “in favor of restless feeling and intense color, as in this highly charged picture, van Gogh made his work a touchstone for all subsequent Expressionist painting” (WikiArt, 2016). Vincent Van Gogh’s, The Starry Night, is Post-Impressionism oil painting on canvas. He created it in 1889, during the time he was committed to the mental asylum in Saint-Rémy, France.
Van Gogh depicted clouds and stars in whirly shape in order to direct the viewer´s eye around the painting. When standing in front the painting, one would spontaneously be attracted by those swirls and would follow one swirl to another. These elements make the painting seems to be fluid and abstract. The yellow crescent moon at the upper right corner is blight and mild. It softens the painting to convey a sense of serenity. Compared to other Impressionist paintings, Starry Night is somehow different: van Gogh used very expressive color and distorted form to give the viewers a very bright picture. Van Gogh wrote a letter to his brother to point out that compared to other Impressionist artists of that time, he utilized “exaggeration in terms of composition.” He uses techniques such as surrealism to draw those swirls. In Starry Night the landscape seems to be a way to convey the artist’s emotion. I believe that the fight van Gogh had against his mental illness is reflected in the painting. When looking at the upper sky in the painting, there is a strong contrast between the sky and the stars, similar to what van Gogh experienced that time: his illness and his hope to recover. Van Gogh painted the village in dark color but on the contrary, he used bright color to draw the windows. I think this contrast gave people the idea that finally human should have hope and try their best to overcome the
The grass contains mostly vertical and diagonal brushstrokes that give an action to suggest wind coming off the water just barely visible behind the plants. The viewers gaze towards the water leads us up to mountain ranges that lead the eye skyward along with the interesting repetition of the clouds above the mountains. Every color used for an item, such as the grass or cypress tree, has an overlaying of highlights that interests the viewer. It is in the fact that an orange or a green has not just that solid color, but also blues and greens that hide in the orange along with the yellows and pinks that hide within the green. The concept of overlaying colors upon another gives depth through shadow and highlight illusions and Van Gogh does this brilliantly here in this painting. Although the Starry Night is considered the masterpiece and has a fame noted to all, this painting, The Cypress and the Star, has a quality that seemed to grow from Van Goh’s past artwork and has many interesting comparisons to the Starry
Vincent van Gogh was an incredible painter who was a part of the post-impressionism movement of art. Many believe his artwork and style shaped 20th-century art and many artists incorporated his painting style. Van Gogh is often regarded as on of the fathers of post-expressionism. Sadly, critics only appreciated his work after his death, by a self-inflicted gunshot, in 1880.
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch artist from the mid 1800’s who was considered to have created approximately 2000 artworks. Growing up, he was classified to be highly emotional and having low self-esteem. Within those depressed emotions, it helped him pioneer the path of expressionism in his art pieces. But as he got more into him artwork he came more mature with his artwork and caused his color patterns and brush strokes to evolve into another style of art called Impressionism. Starry Night Over the Rhone was one of his last ‘few years’ paintings. It was painted in September of 1888. The canvas resides in Musée d'Orsay,
No, I was unable to readily understand or identify the theme of the art work in Amanda’s collection. At first I was able to see a theme with the Representational art pieces The Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh and the Trolley by Robert Frank. The next three pieces of art doesn’t follow the same theme the Free Stamp by Claes Oldenburg, and New Shelton Wet Dry by Jeff Koons are both sculptures which don't follow the same theme as the first two. The last art piece in the collection is The Crossing by Bill Viola which is a video and doesn't follow the theme as the others.
The Post-Impressionism artist Vincent Van Gogh created his masterwork Starry Night in 1889. Unlike the painting of Altdorfer, this painting was more personal and had the conflict of man vs. himself. The painting of Starry Night took place in France while he was in the care of the Saint Remy of Provence Psychiatric Hospital. Van Gogh yearned for a life that was calm and harmonious during his seemingly never ending depressive state. In Starry Night Van Gogh’s point of view is omniscient as well but, he detaches himself even further. He Van Gogh creates a night sky embellished by the swirling of its clouds and the illuminating blaze from its stars. He uses lines that are arabesque in continuation that creates a fluid like design over the work making it harmonious. Located below the dynamic sky is a row rolling hills in which the artist used different tones to create a sense of depth in his work by the use of atmospheric perspective however, the painting still has a look of flatness. The hills lead the eyes to a small calm inviting town created using simple shapes. The church in the valley towers over all the homes as if it was a guardian. The tall steeple of the church is not able to touch the magnificent sky however, there is an eerie cypress tree in the foreground it is able to touch the
It is very popular due to having so many aspects that intrigue viewers. There is the night sky filled with swirling clouds, stars ablaze with their own luminescence, and a bright crescent moon. This sky keeps the viewer’s eyes moving about the painting, following the curves and creating a visual dot to dot with the stars. Below the rolling hills of the horizon lies a small town. There is a peaceful aspect flowing from the structures. The center of the town is the tall steeple of the church, towering largely over the smaller buildings. This steeple gives a sense of stability to the town and also creates the sense of size and isolation. To the left of the painting there is a large dark structure that creates an even greater sense of size and solitude. This structure is grand when compared to the scale of the other objects. The curving lines reflect the ones in the sky and creates depth. This structure also lets the viewer to make sense of what it is. Van Gogh’s use of color in “The Starry Night” has been much debated, particularly the dominance of yellow in this and some of his other later works. Some say the odd choice of coloring in his painting was due to him possibly suffering from lead poisoning. Van Gogh's use of white and yellow creates a circling effect and draws focus to the sky. Vertical lines such as the tree and church tower softly break up the composition without taking away from the night sky in Starry Night. Vincent van Gogh ́s choice of greens and dark blues were achieved with little bits of mint green which shows the reflection of the moon. The buildings in the center of the painting are small blocks of yellows, oranges, and greens with red to the left of the church. The blue in Starry Night is balanced by the orange of the night sky elements. Van Gogh ́s passion for nighttime is evident in the Starry Night painting, where the strong sky sits above the quiet town. It seems
Van Gogh's painting, Starry Night Over the Rhone, was created based on his another painting, "Starry Night". It is concerning in Brian Eno and John Cale's song Spinning Away, which is from the album Wrong Way Up. These two songs seem like the other form of this painting. This was created on the bank of the Rhone River that was only couple-minute walk from the Yellow House to there on Place Lamartine.
This is good for painters who take a while on paintings because they can come back the next day and manipulate something that they want to look differently. The Starry Night is a type of oil painting. It is a realistic picture of what a nighttime sky would look like, therefore it is a piece of representational artwork. You can tell that Van Gogh built up a lot of layers to form the different hues of blues he wanted throughout the painting. The stars in this are very strong and bright while the village seems a little gloomy and depressing.
The sky is made up of navy, black, and light blues, there are also a set of clouds that promise more storms to come. The sky also contains a flock of crows that are leading somewhere off into the distance towards the right side of the painting with the closest crows in the middle of the wheat field. It is important that I should mention the brush stokes that Van Gogh used for this painting. He used juicy and thick layers of paint in each stoke, it even seems that if you were to touch this painting with your hand that the texture would be bumpy because of the excess paint that was used. The brush stokes look quick and are not arranged into or smoothed out in one direction but instead, every stroke seems to be going in different directions.
One of Vincent Van Gogh’s most world renowned paintings is his landscape oil painting Starry Night. The painting displays a small town underneath an unusual yet still extremely beautiful night sky. In this night sky, Van Gogh utilizes an array of colors that blend well together in order to enhance the sky as a whole. The town is clearly a small one due to the amount of buildings that are present in the painting itself. In this small town most of the buildings have lights on which symbolize life in a community. Another visual in Starry Night is the mountain like figures that appear in the background of the illustrious painting. Several things contribute to the beauty of Van Gogh’s painting which are the painting’s function, context, style, and design. Van Gogh’s utilization of these elements help bring further emphasis to his work in Starry Night.