"Starry Night," a poem written by
Tupac Shakur, is a dedication to Van Gogh and his work.
Letters to Theo, a selection of Vincent's letters to his brother in various sized volumes, became popular in several languages during the 1950s.
The Flemish writer and visual artist
Louis Paul Boon based his 1944 novel Abel Gholaerts on the life of Van Gogh, although he moved the story to
Flanders.
Antonin Artaud wrote a study Van Gogh le suicidé de la société (Van Gogh, The Man Suicided by Society) in 1947, after visiting an exhibition of the painter's works.
[2]Archived 2015-03-15 at the
Wayback Machine
Paul Celan mentions Van Gogh's ear in his poem Mächte, Gewalten (Powers, Dominions).
[3]
Woody Allen wrote a
parody of Vincent's letters to Theo. The short story "If the Impressionists Had Been Dentists" is included in Allen's 1975 book Without Feathers.
Theun de Vries wrote a novel Vincent in Den Haag (Vincent in The Hague) which takes place between 1881 and 1883.
Ivan Diviš wrote a poem "Goghova milá" ("Gogh's Lover"), published in his book Rozpleť si vlasy (Unplait Your Hair, 1961).
The Dutch-Northern Irish writer Remco van Straten published "Hastur's Canvas", framing Vincent van Gogh's time in France in the context of
Lovecraftian horror.
[4]
Grigori Frid: Letters of van Gogh, mono-opera in two parts for baritone - clarinet, percussion, piano, strings op. 69 (1975) – small Version for baritone - clarinet, piano and violoncello
Bertold Hummel: Eight fragments from letters of Vincent van Gogh for baritone and string quartet op. 84 (1985)
[5]
Einojuhani Rautavaara: Vincent, opera in three acts (1986-1987). This was based on several events in Van Gogh's life; he later used some of the same themes in his 6th symphony, Vincentiana.
Einojuhani Rautavaara: Vincentiana, symphony N° 6 (1992) - movements: I Tähtiyö (Starry night) II Varikset (The crows) III Saint-Rémy IV Apotheosis
Henri Dutilleux: Correspondances for soprano and orchestra (2002-2004) - movements: I. Danse cosmique (P. Mukherjee) II. A Slava et Galina... (A. Solschenizyn) III. Gong (R. M. Rilke) IV. Gong II (R. M. Rilke) V. De Vincent à Théo... (V. van Gogh)
In 1971, singer
Don McLean wrote the ballad "
Vincent" in honor of Van Gogh; also known by its opening words, "Starry Starry Night," the song refers to the painting[3]
In 2006,
Hong Kong singer-songwriter
Ivana Wong composed a song called "Painting's Meaning" (Traditional Chinese: 畫意) in memory of van Gogh.
Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution (and later frontman
Tomas Kalnoky's other band
Streetlight Manifesto) mention van Gogh in their song "Heres to Life": "Vincent Van Gogh why do you weep?/ You were on your way to heaven but the road was steep./ Who was there to break your fall,/ we're guilty one and all."
The
Vigilantes of Love released a song titled "Skin" which is about Van Gogh.
Brian Eno and
John Cale recorded "Spinning Away"[4] on their album
Wrong Way Up (1990). An example lyric states "One by one, all the stars appear/As the great winds of the planet spiral in/Spinning away, like the night sky at Arles"
Matthew Perryman Jones' album "Land of the Living" includes the song "O Theo", in which the lyrics imagine that Vincent is writing about his life to his brother Theo, echoing how the real Vincent wrote vividly to Theo in his many letters.[5]
In 1948, Alain Resnais made the documentary Van Gogh. Resnais’ black-and-white film featured only Van Gogh's canvases. According to art and film historian John Walker, "the artist’s personal crisis was inscribed in the images on screen by means of accelerated montage".
Mai Zetterling and
David Hughes made the 1972 documentary-drama Vincent the Dutchman, with
Michael Gough in the title role, following in Van Gogh's footsteps and re-visiting the actual locations where he lived and died.
Australian director
Paul Cox made a film called Vincent (also known as Vincent: The Life and Death of Vincent Van Gogh) in 1987, consisting entirely of readings of passages from Vincent's letters (read by
John Hurt), and accompanied by scenes of the actual locations where he painted. The entire film is claimed to be seen through Van Gogh's own eyes, including his final suicide.
Director
Alexander BarnettThe Eyes of Van Gogh, a film about the 12 months Van Gogh spent in an asylum at St. Remy.
web siteblog
Abraham Ségal produced a 70-minute color documentary Van Gogh ou la Revanche Ambiguë (Van Gogh or the Double-edged Triumph) in 1989. This documentary examines the "cult" and "myth" of Van Gogh. It is described[by whom?] as an "intelligent account" of the phenomenon, including scenes of the New York auction of Van Gogh's Irises, of 100-year celebrations in Arles, St. Rémy, Auvers and Amsterdam, as well as interviews with people in Arles, a medical expert, Kirk Douglas, Johan Van Gogh, writers and artists "obsessed" with the artist.
The IMAX film Van Gogh, een kleurrijk portret (Van Gogh, a colorful portrait) was released 1989, the same year the film Vincent van Gogh, een zaaier in Etten (Vincent van Gogh, a sower in Etten) came into circulation, the director was Vincent Oudendijk.
Japanese filmmaker
Akira Kurosawa paid homage to Van Gogh in the 1990 film Dreams. The film was based upon Kurosawa's own dreams and included a vignette titled "Crows" based on the painting Wheat Field with Crows, which starred the American director
Martin Scorsese as Van Gogh.
The first fully hand-painted feature film, Loving Vincent, was released in 2017. This animated biopic recounts the life of Van Gogh, with each frame consisting of an oil painting executed in Van Gogh's style and a plot based on his letters. It was awarded a
European Film Award for Best Animated Feature and also earned an Oscar nomination in 2018.
In 2010,
Benedict Cumberbatch portrayed Van Gogh in the Andrew Hutton bio-documentary Van Gogh: Painted with Words,[7] with
Jamie Parker as his brother
Theo, showing the correspondence between the two brothers and the circumstances at the moments the letters were written. It is based on the real letters of Vincent and Theo, and updated by Andrew Hutton and
Alan Yentob.
In 2013, Dutch actor
Barry Atsma starred as Vincent in a
DutchminiseriesVan Gogh: een huis voor Vincent (literally: Van Gogh: a house for Vincent; international name The Van Gogh Legacy).[8] The dramatized story of Vincent is told through the eyes of his only surviving nephew
Vincent Willem (
nl), played by
Jeroen Krabbé.[9] The series has been sold to broadcasting corporations in
Germany,
Italy and
South Korea.[10]
In the 2018 film At Eternity's Gate (film) actor
Willem Dafoe portrays Van Gogh in the final years of his life, leading up to a dramatisation of the
theory that the painter's death was a result of manslaughter, rather than suicide.
Theatre
In the mid 1970s
Leonard Nimoy starred in a one-man play called Vincent that he'd adapted from the play Van Gogh by Phillip Stephens. A performance was televised in 1981, and a DVD based on the videorecording was released in 2006.[11] The adapted version was published in 1984.[12]
Video games
In Luigi's Mansion, there is a ghost named Vincent Van Gore. He is nicknamed the "Starving Artist" in-game, and battles the player by having his paintings of ghosts come to life and attack
Luigi. He speaks with a French accent, despite van Gogh speaking mostly Dutch.
The character of Vince, the art tutor in the
Nintendo DS game Art Academy, is based on Vincent van Gogh.
In June 2015, Rusty Lake created the third installment of
Cube Escape, Cube Escape: Arles. This installment ended in Van Gogh walking out into the painting Starry Night.
Popular recognition
In 2004 he was nominated for the title
De Grootste Nederlander (The Greatest Dutchman) and came in 10th place.
^The Music magazine/Musical courier - Volume 164 - Page 32 1962 Another important Turkish opera. Van Gogh, by the young composer Nevit Kodalli, was premiered in 1956. The libretto, by playwright Orhan Asena, is based on the Irving Stone novel Lust for Life which was translated into Turkish by Bulent ..
"Starry Night," a poem written by
Tupac Shakur, is a dedication to Van Gogh and his work.
Letters to Theo, a selection of Vincent's letters to his brother in various sized volumes, became popular in several languages during the 1950s.
The Flemish writer and visual artist
Louis Paul Boon based his 1944 novel Abel Gholaerts on the life of Van Gogh, although he moved the story to
Flanders.
Antonin Artaud wrote a study Van Gogh le suicidé de la société (Van Gogh, The Man Suicided by Society) in 1947, after visiting an exhibition of the painter's works.
[2]Archived 2015-03-15 at the
Wayback Machine
Paul Celan mentions Van Gogh's ear in his poem Mächte, Gewalten (Powers, Dominions).
[3]
Woody Allen wrote a
parody of Vincent's letters to Theo. The short story "If the Impressionists Had Been Dentists" is included in Allen's 1975 book Without Feathers.
Theun de Vries wrote a novel Vincent in Den Haag (Vincent in The Hague) which takes place between 1881 and 1883.
Ivan Diviš wrote a poem "Goghova milá" ("Gogh's Lover"), published in his book Rozpleť si vlasy (Unplait Your Hair, 1961).
The Dutch-Northern Irish writer Remco van Straten published "Hastur's Canvas", framing Vincent van Gogh's time in France in the context of
Lovecraftian horror.
[4]
Grigori Frid: Letters of van Gogh, mono-opera in two parts for baritone - clarinet, percussion, piano, strings op. 69 (1975) – small Version for baritone - clarinet, piano and violoncello
Bertold Hummel: Eight fragments from letters of Vincent van Gogh for baritone and string quartet op. 84 (1985)
[5]
Einojuhani Rautavaara: Vincent, opera in three acts (1986-1987). This was based on several events in Van Gogh's life; he later used some of the same themes in his 6th symphony, Vincentiana.
Einojuhani Rautavaara: Vincentiana, symphony N° 6 (1992) - movements: I Tähtiyö (Starry night) II Varikset (The crows) III Saint-Rémy IV Apotheosis
Henri Dutilleux: Correspondances for soprano and orchestra (2002-2004) - movements: I. Danse cosmique (P. Mukherjee) II. A Slava et Galina... (A. Solschenizyn) III. Gong (R. M. Rilke) IV. Gong II (R. M. Rilke) V. De Vincent à Théo... (V. van Gogh)
In 1971, singer
Don McLean wrote the ballad "
Vincent" in honor of Van Gogh; also known by its opening words, "Starry Starry Night," the song refers to the painting[3]
In 2006,
Hong Kong singer-songwriter
Ivana Wong composed a song called "Painting's Meaning" (Traditional Chinese: 畫意) in memory of van Gogh.
Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution (and later frontman
Tomas Kalnoky's other band
Streetlight Manifesto) mention van Gogh in their song "Heres to Life": "Vincent Van Gogh why do you weep?/ You were on your way to heaven but the road was steep./ Who was there to break your fall,/ we're guilty one and all."
The
Vigilantes of Love released a song titled "Skin" which is about Van Gogh.
Brian Eno and
John Cale recorded "Spinning Away"[4] on their album
Wrong Way Up (1990). An example lyric states "One by one, all the stars appear/As the great winds of the planet spiral in/Spinning away, like the night sky at Arles"
Matthew Perryman Jones' album "Land of the Living" includes the song "O Theo", in which the lyrics imagine that Vincent is writing about his life to his brother Theo, echoing how the real Vincent wrote vividly to Theo in his many letters.[5]
In 1948, Alain Resnais made the documentary Van Gogh. Resnais’ black-and-white film featured only Van Gogh's canvases. According to art and film historian John Walker, "the artist’s personal crisis was inscribed in the images on screen by means of accelerated montage".
Mai Zetterling and
David Hughes made the 1972 documentary-drama Vincent the Dutchman, with
Michael Gough in the title role, following in Van Gogh's footsteps and re-visiting the actual locations where he lived and died.
Australian director
Paul Cox made a film called Vincent (also known as Vincent: The Life and Death of Vincent Van Gogh) in 1987, consisting entirely of readings of passages from Vincent's letters (read by
John Hurt), and accompanied by scenes of the actual locations where he painted. The entire film is claimed to be seen through Van Gogh's own eyes, including his final suicide.
Director
Alexander BarnettThe Eyes of Van Gogh, a film about the 12 months Van Gogh spent in an asylum at St. Remy.
web siteblog
Abraham Ségal produced a 70-minute color documentary Van Gogh ou la Revanche Ambiguë (Van Gogh or the Double-edged Triumph) in 1989. This documentary examines the "cult" and "myth" of Van Gogh. It is described[by whom?] as an "intelligent account" of the phenomenon, including scenes of the New York auction of Van Gogh's Irises, of 100-year celebrations in Arles, St. Rémy, Auvers and Amsterdam, as well as interviews with people in Arles, a medical expert, Kirk Douglas, Johan Van Gogh, writers and artists "obsessed" with the artist.
The IMAX film Van Gogh, een kleurrijk portret (Van Gogh, a colorful portrait) was released 1989, the same year the film Vincent van Gogh, een zaaier in Etten (Vincent van Gogh, a sower in Etten) came into circulation, the director was Vincent Oudendijk.
Japanese filmmaker
Akira Kurosawa paid homage to Van Gogh in the 1990 film Dreams. The film was based upon Kurosawa's own dreams and included a vignette titled "Crows" based on the painting Wheat Field with Crows, which starred the American director
Martin Scorsese as Van Gogh.
The first fully hand-painted feature film, Loving Vincent, was released in 2017. This animated biopic recounts the life of Van Gogh, with each frame consisting of an oil painting executed in Van Gogh's style and a plot based on his letters. It was awarded a
European Film Award for Best Animated Feature and also earned an Oscar nomination in 2018.
In 2010,
Benedict Cumberbatch portrayed Van Gogh in the Andrew Hutton bio-documentary Van Gogh: Painted with Words,[7] with
Jamie Parker as his brother
Theo, showing the correspondence between the two brothers and the circumstances at the moments the letters were written. It is based on the real letters of Vincent and Theo, and updated by Andrew Hutton and
Alan Yentob.
In 2013, Dutch actor
Barry Atsma starred as Vincent in a
DutchminiseriesVan Gogh: een huis voor Vincent (literally: Van Gogh: a house for Vincent; international name The Van Gogh Legacy).[8] The dramatized story of Vincent is told through the eyes of his only surviving nephew
Vincent Willem (
nl), played by
Jeroen Krabbé.[9] The series has been sold to broadcasting corporations in
Germany,
Italy and
South Korea.[10]
In the 2018 film At Eternity's Gate (film) actor
Willem Dafoe portrays Van Gogh in the final years of his life, leading up to a dramatisation of the
theory that the painter's death was a result of manslaughter, rather than suicide.
Theatre
In the mid 1970s
Leonard Nimoy starred in a one-man play called Vincent that he'd adapted from the play Van Gogh by Phillip Stephens. A performance was televised in 1981, and a DVD based on the videorecording was released in 2006.[11] The adapted version was published in 1984.[12]
Video games
In Luigi's Mansion, there is a ghost named Vincent Van Gore. He is nicknamed the "Starving Artist" in-game, and battles the player by having his paintings of ghosts come to life and attack
Luigi. He speaks with a French accent, despite van Gogh speaking mostly Dutch.
The character of Vince, the art tutor in the
Nintendo DS game Art Academy, is based on Vincent van Gogh.
In June 2015, Rusty Lake created the third installment of
Cube Escape, Cube Escape: Arles. This installment ended in Van Gogh walking out into the painting Starry Night.
Popular recognition
In 2004 he was nominated for the title
De Grootste Nederlander (The Greatest Dutchman) and came in 10th place.
^The Music magazine/Musical courier - Volume 164 - Page 32 1962 Another important Turkish opera. Van Gogh, by the young composer Nevit Kodalli, was premiered in 1956. The libretto, by playwright Orhan Asena, is based on the Irving Stone novel Lust for Life which was translated into Turkish by Bulent ..