What do you think?
Rate this book
528 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1914
STARRY LETTERS
I should like to do portraits which will appear as revelations to people in a hundred years time. I am not trying to achieve this by photographic likeness but by rendering our impassioned expressions, by using our modern knowledge and appreciation of colour as a means of expressing and exalting character..
For great things do not just happen by impulse but are a succession of small things linked together.
One of Vincen't most famous paintings, and a personal favorite of mine: "Starry Night".
Ever yours,
Vincent
"Admire as much as you can, most people don't admire enough"
“What is drawing? How does one learn it? It is working through an invisible iron wall that seems to stand between what one feels and what one can do."
"Let us try to grasp the secrets of technique so well that people will be taken in and swear by all that is holy that we have no technique. Let our work be so savant that it seems naive and does not reek of our cleverness."
"The day will come, however, when people will see [my pictures] are worth more than the price of the paint and my living expenses, very meagre on the whole, which we put into them."
"How does one become mediocre? By going along with this today and conforming to that tomorrow, as the world wants, and by not speaking out against the world and by only following public opinion!"
"...there is something of Rembrandt in Shakespeare, something of Correggio in Michelet and something of Delacroix in V. Hugo, and there is also something of Rembrandt in the Gospel or, if you prefer, something of the Gospel in Rembrandt, it comes to much the same thing if you understand it properly, do not try to distort it..."
"Can you tell what goes on within by looking at what happens without? There may be a great fire in your soul, but no one ever comes to warm himself by it, all that passers-by can see is a little smoke coming out of the chimney and they walk on."
"Oh, I am no friend of present-day Christianity, thought its founder was sublime. That icy coldness mesmerized even me, in my youth - but I have taken my revenge since then. How? By worshipping the love they, the theologians, call sin, by respecting a whore, etc., and not too many would be respectable, pious ladies. To some, woman is heresy and diabolical. To me she is the opposite."
"What comforts me is that I am beginning to look upon madness as a disease like any other and accept it as such."
"So instead of giving in to despair I chose active melancholy, in so far as I was capable of activity, in other words I chose the kind of melancholy that hopes, that strives and that seeks, in preference to the melancholy that despairs numbly and in distress."
"The more active one is, the better, and I would sooner have a failure than sit idle and do nothing."
"Plumb the depths [of the sea of life] that is what we too must do if we want to make a catch, and if we sometimes have to work the whole night through without catching anything, then we do well not to give up and to cast the net once more at dawn"
"Fishermen know that the sea is perilous and the storm fearful, but have never thought the perils reason enough for deciding to take a stroll along the beach instead. They leave that sort of prudence to those who relish it."
"Art is something which, though produced by human hands, is not wrought by hands alone, but wells up from a deeper source, from a man's soul."
"It seemed to me that you were suffering, like me, from seeing our youth go up in smoke - but if it throws out new growth in one's work, then nothing is lost, for the capacity to work is another form of youth."
"How much sadness there is in life. Still, it won't do to become depressed, one should turn to other things, and the right thing is work, but there are times when one can only find peace of mind in the realization: I, too, shall not be spared by unhappiness."
For look: people used to think that the earth was flat. That was true, and still is today, of, say, Paris to Asniéres.
But that does not alter the fact that science demonstrates that the earth as a whole is round, something nobody nowadays disputes.
For all that, people still persist in thinking that life is flat and runs from birth to death.
But life, too, is probably round, and much greater in scope and possibilities than the hemisphere we now know.