My hand painted van Gogh map charts the life and works of Vincent van Gogh.
This van Gogh map tells Vincent's story through his paintings and words. So I have shown motifs from some of his best-loved paintings very roughly in the locations where they were made, or where they help to illustrate his life.
- An original painting in watercolour, size 730mm x 520mm on 600gsm cotton rag paper
- A2 size signed poster prints
- Digital file for you to make a single print at a format and size of your choice
- I also have of this painting
How long did it take to paint the van Gogh map?
The actual putting down of paint took only about 14 days. But took 38 years of study.
The study of a lifetime
I became gripped by the life and works of Vincent van Gogh way back in 1979. I was a teenager on a school trip to London's .
My art teacher, Mr John Blunt, stood me in front of Vincent's paintings of the Sunflowers (F 454/JH 1562) and the Artist's Chair and Pipe (F 498/JH 1635). It felt like I'd been punched between the eyes! What an incredible fusion of colour, sponteneity, drawing, and passion!
That moment has had a powerful influence my own art practice and also my travels. I have visited nearly all the places where Vincent lived and worked. for a list of which paintings are included on this van Gogh map.
Where did Vincent van Gogh live and work?
Vincent was born in the Netherlands, in the province of Brabant, close to the Belgian border. Over the years he travelled all over his native land. He had a very soft spot for The Hague, where (scandalously!) he lived with a woman and her children as a family. It's the only time he enjoyed a family life of his own.
In 1883 he went up to Drenthe a province in the north of the Netherlands where he says he taught himself to paint.
As a very young man, he went to live and work in England, in Ramsgate and then in London. He was a school teacher, a preacher, and an art dealer. From this period he leaves us only a few sketches in letters. He loved to read, not only the bible but also contemporary literature - he was a big fan of Charles Dickens.
In Belgium, Vincent went to work in the mining community of the Borinage as a lay preacher. He lived for a time in Antwerp where he briefly enrolled at the Art Academy.
But it was in France that Vincent's outpouring of paintings was at its most frenzied. He lived in Paris with his brother Theo who was an art dealer, and in every sense Vincent's greatest supporter.
Vincent moved south to Arles in 1888 to produce many of his best-loved paintings. It's where the most infamous act of artistic self harm took place - the ear slashing episode. He spent the last 3 months of his life in the beautiful village of Auvers just north of Paris.
This van Gogh map charts them all!
"You can't be at the pole and the equator at the same time. You must choose your own line, as I hope to do, and it will probably be colour"
Vincent to his brother Theo, April 1888