Review by Choice Review
Admittedly, this reviewer was not looking forward to reading this book. Really, does the world need yet another biography of Van Gogh? Do readers need yet another recounting of the turbulent goings-on of the so-called studio of the south? Apparently, the answer is yes. Author Gayford (chief art critic for the television program Bloomberg Europe) has managed to squeeze another angle out of this tired story through a careful reading of Van Gogh's and Gauguin's correspondence, by studious, concise comparisons of their work and working methods, and by not overlooking the peculiarities of their daily lives in Arles. In fact, it is this last element of Gayford's account that is the most refreshing. His way of describing quotidian existence, like cooking, elevates it in the case of Gauguin and Van Gogh to ritualistic significance. Certainly, art historians will find Gayford's telling a bit lacking, but that is not what is important here. What is important is that he convincingly and richly paints a picture of the abiding relationships between these two men, each to their contemporaries, and each to his art. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels. D. E. Gliem Eckerd College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
In this intelligent and engrossing book, Gayford offers an unusually vivid retelling of the famous events of late 1888, when Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin shared a studio in a small town in southern France. Relying heavily on their voluminous correspondence (written mostly to Theo van Gogh, Vincent's brother and Gauguin's art dealer), Gayford follows their trajectory from harmony to discord and, finally, van Gogh's madness. The book reveals the complicated dynamics of the relationship: desperately lonely, van Gogh wanted Gauguin to remain in Arles as long as possible, yet his increasingly vehement arguing repelled his friend. And better than most others who have attempted it, Gayford illuminates how the two artists influenced each other's work. Van Gogh, for instance, might never have completed one of his masterpieces, his final version of The Sower, without the lessons provided by Gauguin's diagonal compositions and foregrounded figures. Gayford persuasively diagnoses van Gogh's illness (bipolar disorder) and even provides a plausible rationale for the notorious incident of the artist's lopping off of his own ear. --Kevin Nance Copyright 2006 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Van Gogh's reputation in the public imagination has been made as much by his descent into madness as by his art. Detailing the final year of his life and the "Studio of the South" in which Gauguin and Van Gogh painted side by side, Gayford brings the art back into focus. Explications of the works illuminate the collaboration similar subjects find very different treatment by two entirely different temperaments. Yet their influence on each other is everywhere a story that Van Gogh recommends to Gauguin finds its way into a painting; Van Gogh uses the jute canvas that is Gauguin's material of choice. While some of this is well-trodden territory, Gayford's narrative is genuinely dramatic as it moves toward Van Gogh's fateful end. Gayford makes exciting new connections between the tone of Van Gogh's correspondence and known scholarship about his probable bipolar disorder. The influences of literature, the news media and so-called "hygienic excursions" (visits to the local brothels) percolate in these letters and under the surfaces of the artists' canvases. So, argues Gayford, were they invading Van Gogh's mind. Though it is impossible to entirely understand what motivated these two great artists during their weeks together in Arles, these pages deliver as close and vivid an image as may be possible. 60 b&w illus. (Nov. 14) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Art critic Gayford offers a stimulating study of art history's truly odd couple, the calm Paul Gauguin and the explosive Vincent van Gogh. Adding to this work's historical value is the period covered-1888-which precedes their acknowledged fame. Gayford offers insights into the concerns of these future giants and outlines their everyday activities, including what they cooked and ate, their walks, their brothel visits, and their discussions. He explores in detail the bipolar affliction he believes was responsible for van Gogh's moments of insanity, covering exclusively the nine weeks before van Gogh's infamous act of self-mutilation and its immediate aftermath. But Gayford also provides a masterful sketch of Gauguin's and van Gogh's differing temperaments and aesthetical approaches to the objects they painted. He succeeds in reinforcing their mutual understanding and influence on each other, keeping the focus on their paintings. This blend of art history, biography, and criticism is as engaging and captivating as it is informative. Recommended for all public and academic libraries.-Edward K. Owusu-Ansah, Kingsborough Community Coll. Lib., CUNY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review
Adult/High School-In an accessible and even affectionate work of art history, Gayford tells of the two artists who lived and worked in the South of France in the fall of 1888. Their story is told in short episodes, reconstructed through the formal analysis and comparison of the paintings they created during this period, and through letters and newspapers that place the work in the context of the contemporary art world, popular literature, and current events. Their time together culminated in Van Gogh's famous ear-cutting incident (which is revealed on the jacket copy), teens with an interest in the artist's colorful yet short life may take to Gayford's somewhat breathless approach leading up to the big event. The author delights in the quotidian details of his story: the joint visits to local brothels, how the weather may have affected work habits, Gauguin's cooking skills. The biggest drawback is the use of small black-and-white photos of paintings. Suggest that teens read this alongside larger monographs with color reproductions to appreciate the art fully.-Jenny Gasset, Orange County Public Library, CA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
In the fall and early winter of 1888, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin shared a studio in a yellow house in the south of France. Result? Much painting and whoring and, at the end, a meltdown and an ear-slicing. Gayford (co-editor of the Grove Book of Art Writing and chief art critic for Bloomberg News) has crafted a brisk, engaging narrative about the brief co-habitation of two of the world's most celebrated painters. Although the author focuses more frequently on the mercurial van Gogh and his varied vagaries, Gauguin comes off well, and the many reproductions offered here of the works he produced during his time with van Gogh form an eloquent testimony to his genius. Gauguin also emerges as a tolerant man who recognized the prodigious and prolific talent of his friend and endured the tortured Dutchman as long as possible. Things started well that remarkable fall. The two took walks, painted common subjects, visited local museums, read books together (Zola, for instance), visited the local prostitutes regularly, agreed on the splendors of Delacroix, argued about the merits of other painters. Gauguin's career accelerated during the period (he sold several paintings through the offices of Theo van Gogh, the painter's brother), occasioning some anxiety in Vincent, who was not doing so well. The bonhomie eventually weakened, and when van Gogh sliced off his ear (or a part thereof), Gauguin, after helping rescue his friend, entrained for Paris; the two never saw each other again. Gayford's principal interest is with the paintings. He discusses the major ones (and some of the minor) with great care and sensitivity and sees in the artists' work some cross-fertilization. The author ends with the deaths of all involved and speculates that van Gogh suffered from bipolar disorder. Lucid and learned and propelled by a piercing dramatic irony. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.