After U.S. naval commander Matthew Perry sailed
into Tokyo harbor and coerced the Japanese to open the country to trade, the
Western world was introduced to the art of woodblock printing. In 1867, the Exposition Universelle in
Paris ignited a craze for Japanese art.
featured scenes of ordinary life, influenced many of the leading Impressionist
and Post-Impressionist artists, including Monet, Degas, Gaugin and Van Gogh.
brother, Theo, purchased hundreds of the ukiyo-e woodblock prints, several
of which Vincent traced and reproduced as paintings. The specific artistic
conventions, that characterized Japanese artwork, and which Van Gogh admired
and embraced in his own drawings and paintings include:
artistic convention of dramatically modelling forms through the use of
chiaroscuro lighting, which exaggerates the contrast between highlight and
shadow. Instead, he illuminates his
subject matter more uniformly, as is evidenced in his painting of irises
(below).
manner of lighting, Van Gogh utilized a limited number of uniform colors. In
his use of lighting and color, the flattened forms in his compositions are nonetheless
very appealing. By reducing his palette
to a few basic hues, he emulated woodblock printing. In this method of printing,
one carved woodblock is used for one or at most a few colors.
subject matter, Van Gogh’s style is very linear, incorporating bold, dark outlines.
These contours infuse his portrayals with energy and feeling. Rather than shading
objects, he uses dynamic linework to suggest the depth of shapes in the same manner
used in Japanese woodblock printing.
historical scenes or religious themes, Van Gogh depicted the simpler aspects of
everyday life, as shown in his Red Vineyards painting.
ignores the typical rules of Western perspective. Instead, Van Gogh often
distorts the rendering of his subjects. Notice in the picture below how the
vase is represented in much the same way as Cezanne depicts many of the forms
in his paintings.
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