See also: - Becoming Van Gogh - Photos: Behind the scenes as a famous Van Gogh is uncrated and hung - Vincent/Clyfford
All photos courtesy of the Denver Art Museum and contributing collections.
But Standring wanted to build an exhibit that made the case for a new way to look at van Gogh, the rational artist, as opposed to the mythical mad soul who painted from his gut and not from his brain. And gathering the right combination of works was integral to that purpose.
"This isn't a biographical exhibit," he says. "We spend more of a focus on van Gogh as the self-taught artist, showing him learning how to draw, learning to use color, draw the human figure."His works appeal to our sensibilities and the core of our notion of creativity. It's that predilection of the human mind to want to complete sentences. Mentally, we love his mark making. What I'm discovering in this exhibition is that it's a continuum in his career. He never stopped evolving in his short, pithy, ten-year career."
After his years of studying van Gogh's entire body of work, Standring has nothing but praise for the artist. He wonders, too, how much work van Gogh discarded as imperfect. "In his known corpus, it's difficult to find a dog, or something even a little weak," he says. "They're there, but for this guy, he's batting .325, year in and year out, for his ten-year career."
Standring's favorite painting in the show? "Grass and Butterflies" (see above).
Becoming Van Gogh opens Sunday, October 21, and continues at the Denver Art Museum through January 20; tickets range from $11 to $25. Visit the exhibit website for details.
Following is preview of works from different periods in van Gogh's life as an evolving artist.
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