fckyeaharthistory:

Vincent van Gogh - La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin), 1889. Oil on canvas 
From the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC:

Of the five versions of Van Gogh’s portrait of Augustine Roulin, wife of his friend the postmaster of Arles, the present canvas is the one the sitter chose for herself. Van Gogh remarked that “she had a good eye and took the best.” He began the portraits just before his breakdown in Arles, in December 1888, and completed them in early 1889. As he worked on the successive versions, the composition (which he titled “La Berceuse,” meaning “lullaby, or woman who rocks the cradle,” indicated by the rope the sitter holds) took on added meaning. As he revealed in his letters, the maternal image became the locus of literary and symbolic associations, ranging from the writings of Dutch and French novelists to the consoling music of Berlioz and Wagner. Van Gogh envisioned “La Berceuse” as the center of a triptych, flanked by “Sunflowers,” like candelabra.

fckyeaharthistory:

Vincent van GoghLa Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin), 1889. Oil on canvas 

From the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC:

Of the five versions of Van Gogh’s portrait of Augustine Roulin, wife of his friend the postmaster of Arles, the present canvas is the one the sitter chose for herself. Van Gogh remarked that “she had a good eye and took the best.” He began the portraits just before his breakdown in Arles, in December 1888, and completed them in early 1889. As he worked on the successive versions, the composition (which he titled “La Berceuse,” meaning “lullaby, or woman who rocks the cradle,” indicated by the rope the sitter holds) took on added meaning. As he revealed in his letters, the maternal image became the locus of literary and symbolic associations, ranging from the writings of Dutch and French novelists to the consoling music of Berlioz and Wagner. Van Gogh envisioned “La Berceuse” as the center of a triptych, flanked by “Sunflowers,” like candelabra.

(via artpedia)

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    “He transformed the pain of his tormented life into ecstatic beauty. Pain is easy to portray, but to use your passion...
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    my wall and now feel like I should put Sunflowers next to it, instead of...her husband, as...
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