In July of 1890, Vincent van Gogh, a Dutch artist living in the French village of Auvers, had created nearly eighty paintings in less than three months.
In recent weeks, he’d been attracted by the fields and plains not far from the inn where he lived that summer. At the height of his genius, the prolific artist was despondent.
Thirty-seven years old, Vincent was financially supported by an ailing brother and had produced more than eight hundred paintings which no one wanted to buy. In his entire career, it is believed that van Gogh sold only one work—"The Red Vineyard"—which he painted in 1888 (and Anna Boch purchased in 1890).
At dusk—on Sunday, the 27th of July, 1890—Vincent walked to a field in Auvers-sur-Oise and ended his life.
In this story about van Gogh, his life and his stunning art, explore:
In this story behind the art, also discover Vincent the man:
Learning about the life and work of this amazing Dutch artist comes alive at AwesomeStories. Depending on a teacher’s preference, students can:
Using an integrated approach—combining visual arts, historical materials, social studies and language arts—students investigate the story in personalized-learning fashion with words and concepts suitable for a range of achievement levels. Students can then create their own stories, using the AwesomeStories’ archive of primary sources, to produce their own related stories to share with their class, their family and (if accepted for publication) … the whole online world!
This image depicts “The Red Vineyard,” which Vincent van Gogh created in Arles, France during November of 1888. The artist Anna Boch purchased this painting in 1890—reportedly the only-known work which Vincent sold during his lifetime. The oil-on-canvas is now owned by the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts (in Moscow).