Untitled - eScholarShare
Transcription
Untitled - eScholarShare
.• ~--------------- A 3IiiARCH TO\'JARD CREATING CmUSTlJUJ ICm~O(}RAPH{ THROUGH ELEr·'iEfITS OF nESIG!'~ AIm SYMBOLISM A Thesis Presented to The School of Graduate Studies Drake University In Partial FUlfillment of the Requ1renants for the Degree Maeter of Pine Arts by Ronald L. Almquist AUfwe t 1972 A SEARCH TOWARD CREATING CHRISTIAN ICONOGRAPHY THROUGH ELEMENTS OF DESIGN AND SYMBOLISM by Ronald L. Almquist Approved by Committee: Cha.irman School of raduata tudias TABLg OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I. PAGE INTRODUCTION. • 1 • • 2 VAN GOGH PHILOSOPHY OF ART AND LIFE • • :5 VAN GOGH SYMBOLISM. • II. VINCENT VAN IMAGl~RY III. IV. v. VI. S~1BOLISM • • VIII. • GOGH-.BRE~~ • • • • • • • • • • FROM TRADITIONAL • • OF THE AUTHOR • • • • • • • • 12 • 29 • 33 ICONOGRAPHIC SY1J!BOLS FOR A BIBLICAL EXPRESSION • • VII. • • • • DRAWINGS, PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE. • CONCLUSION i3IBLIOGRAPHY • • • • • • .. . . • 37 74 • • • • • • 76 LIST OF FIGURES FIGURE 1. PAGE "'l'ha Resurrection of LazaI'us" by Vincent Van Gogh" 2. • • • • • • • • • • " 19 • • 20 . 25 • 26 • 39 Medium: oharcoal, ooute crayon Sise: 12" x 24.". • • .. 40 " liThe Resurraction of' Lazarus II by Rembrandt van Rijn "."...... 3. "Willow" by Vinoent Van Gogh. • • • 4. "Cypres ses If by Vinoent Ven Gogh • • • 5. Poem, "Darkness, Light, Death and Life,u by Margaret Mae Armagost • " " • • • 6. Drawing NO.1. and ink. 7. Drawing No.2. and ink. 8. 9. q,. ,A. 'OJ Drawing No.4. . . . . 0 • Medium: charcoal, conte crayon 24" x IB. It . . . . . . 45 Drawing No.5. Medium: charcoal, oonte orayon ")I •. t ! ..... " 1. R .• fl •. 'lnotI J$ .....uk. . S'1· ~ .. ~e • <U.+ _ •••• 46 Size: 0 11. Drawing ~d ink. • 6. Medium: 51:?:e: lS ft x cbarooal. conte crayon 24. 11 • .. • .. .. .. .. 12. Drawing No.7. Medium: chercoal, conte or'ayon and ink. Size: 24" x IB . " . . • • 13. 1. F'-, . . 16. 1+1 Drawing No.3. Medium: charcoal, oonte crayon . ~ .lD.{. 4 I IP-.J tf .... 24. 11 • ano v_ z""o, and ink. 10. Medium: charcoal, conte crayon Size: 18 u x 24. ft • • • • .. • .. Drawing No.8. Medium: cbarcoal, cDnt~ crayon 49 . 50 Drawing Ho, 9. Medium: charcoal, conte orayon an din l{ • S i :'j e : 2!.i It x 1 H• It .. • • 51 I anuA 1nK. Dr ':1winl'ct ~md ink .. uQ i <7 ...• "". u'Gl '0 • 10. Size: Drawing No. 11. and ink. Size: 2/1'-i' II x 1·. B•• l! • dlum: 23?~!l Medium: 1 f1" x • • c!'Ftrcoal, contei x 113 .. H • 0 • • oharcoal, conte crayon ....1 <:::1+ • If 0 52 53 ----------------iv 17. Drawin~ No. 12. and ink. M~dium: Size 18l! x 18. Drawing No .. 13. and ink. 19. Drawing No. 14. and ink. 20. :t1ediutlU IBn Sizet Size: charcoal, 24. tl X • • • • • • • • • .. • r{ediumr charcoal; oonte oraron 18 n x 24.'1. • Drawing No. 15. Mediumt chl.lreoa1, conte crayon and ink. Bize: 14't x 22." .. • .. • 2). • 51 . 61 .. 62 • 6) • 64 Paintln~ No.1. emulsion. 22. Medium: acrylic polymer Size ~ 28 n x 42." .. .. .. P~inting No.2. Medium: Q.crvlio polymer emulsion. 8izee 28" x 36."'... • Painting ~ro.. .3.. emulsion. aor~lic polymer M€ldiurrn Sizer .. 36- x 42.. • • Title: "HeslJrrcaction l.u ~·1edium: painted wood oonstruction. Size: 28" x 51~.n Reightl 22." . •• • .• . . 26. 54 cbarcoal, conte orayon 24. If • 21. • Detail from Figure 25, "Resurrection 1." 27. Title' " Burraction 2." oon8tr~otion. )6 .. H SiBS: 47" Medium: x 22. ft . . . . II 70 * 71 p13.1ntad t400d Heigbt: •• • 72 • 73 ---------------CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Christian art baa been oustomarily defined as depic tion of religious subjects and scenes derived fram Biblical sto~y. As a .raula, emphasis is plaoed cn the portrayal of' Biblieal charaoters appropriate to places of worship that serve in Ii oonvention!11 maImer the interests of' the church. Suoh ioonography causes representation to become repeti tive. Hepetition oaw:aes mucb of tbe symbolio content to 10S8 th~ vi tali ty of i t9 m€JiI:H!!age weak and dead. eventually ~ and 1. t becomes Beoause of this, there is justification for creating. new Christian iconography. i~ Such tbe object of' this tbesis. The average mind, inoluding that Ii ~f the artist, is P!lwn shop of reueed, old and t-lOrn out Gbristiafl images: of nlghtgowned figures in Isntiroental poses, full of expretlsive piSf!:turss and exaSH1cerated sffiotiot"H! of implicit anguish and eorrow. The artistic mind, too~ turns away in an attitudo of' nonaeoept.ance from these 9srsistent a.sElocia tion~; a.nd as a reeult the great majority of artists today simply 00 not oontemplate working on Chri~ti~n subJects or tbemeHI. The writers of the pBrBon~l ima~B of th~ Christ spals did not try to present a or the artist to stereotype 2 in paint. They tell notbing of His personal features, His voice or bow He dreseed. This laok of interest 1n the physical features of Jesus is not surprising when one realiz~s that the evangelists were not cODcer-ned primarily in writing His biograph! but were vitally concerned with proclaiming that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God. \<Jbether Ha tall or short, dark or fair was irrelevant 'W'1S to their purposes. Yet art bas always been intimately bound up witb the presentation of Chrlet in visual terms--eitber in drawing, painting, sculpture, stained gla8B. mosaics, or t~peEtry. 'rhe gub jec t of these t10rks of art ti1as sf thar the person of Cbrist seen in one of the inoidents from Hie recorded life, ~vent or some othsr 13iblical from the Old or l'Yew Testaments. For such to be the only acoeptable art of tbe church is to lim! t Chri s tian1 ty i tee If to a time and place. is not limited to ~y bistorical time or place. evancy of its rnessn3.C;6 is jt:18t as in the past. V~cn ~n ~rti8t f1 !'Sure on a cruci fix, a 3t. impOl"'t',U1t Chris ti IL"11 ty The rel tQd'aY as it was limits himself to a Cb~ist<Tohn tile Bilptis t, or a T'ofadonna 9..Yid Child, he :trmnediately limite Chrlstiwity to an 'i880e1'1 tion ,,,tth events '1nd people t:md be neglects the possibility of i~a~ery tho very that ha~rt eMl be of God's ~s8ociated mese~ge to with Ghrlgt'~ m~nklnd. teachings- vnrcgNT VAN GOGH- BREA~ ~ROM Since time beg~, TRADITIONAL IMAGERY the artist haa always been capable of perceiving and setting forth relationships of whicb most men are oblivious. His epecial act bas been the making of forms which a.dequately express and carry personal meaning common to himself and others. familiar forms of art, whicb When the traditional and ha~e been socially shaped ~~d have persisted, no longer meet with the changing experienoes of the present mDment, a tension is consciously felt within the mind of the artist. From this tension he create~ a synthesis; be must make new forme for content, because old ones eomehow Beem inadequate for Van Gogh rejected any tod~y. ~isual portrayal of Christ which wae and is the natural oulmination for all traditional Cbrietian painting. p~inting a likeneas of Christ, end twice he destroyed a study whioh he had begun. fOf' Witb full intent he refrained from the j;igur8, at;! Ria refusal did not spring from contempt rsan of Christ, for be saw in Him Ii Han incomparable g'I'€Hlter artist then all other £l,rtists . • • • Hs mads neither statues n2r pictures, but wDrked in living 4 flash, making living men immortals. lt1 he could not cre~te ~ Van Gogh felt that true picture of Christ, which to even a small degree could radiate some of His humble majesty and refleot some of the hope9 for the future whieb, ot necessity, are bound up with the idea of Christ. tife to Vinoent held so muoh beauty, while at the same time @o much loneliness, pain and SUffering, that he wae forced to divorce himself frJm the world of traditional religious images. Instead, be Bought to depict the teacbings of Cbrist through his own personal ferms and impressionistic colors. A desire to teacb and comfort sparked bis quest to oreate the o@ginnings of the Ii fl"e~h, I'll new symbolio ieonography. till 1::y of to creato ~ 1"'0 vi ving He did not undertake 010 and obsolete s ymbole, but began new kind of Christian symbolism, based on the experiencee and needs of his f rom the Hore Id lit" LElO b 1m. o~m lifa and time and taken ---------VAN GOGH PHILOSOPHY OF ART AND LIFE Vincent's caraeP as an artist began in the summer of 18130. iner, 01113 At that time be was 11 vlng in th~ house of Ch~r18s Dacrueq at Cueemee, Belgium. He va. It ~ivan 11 ttla room wbich he set up as bis first is'tud10. lunging and A desire to be of soma good to those around !l bimand find a p~rpos~ h ad found hi iii calling J for living, made him write When he II And in a pi CtUl"'6 I want to eay something comforting, as comforting as music is comfort ing. nl There he began his firs t original drawings of miners going to work in the early mornings. Vincent'S! desire to serve and comfort bum"tnlty be!!an two years e&r1181', at tbe llge of twemty-:riv6, t'31181'1 he was commissioned as a lay preacher to tbe Borinage, a mining di9trict irl Belgium. Evan@eliaal Church. He was commissioned by the At the Borlna~8 Vinoent so~~ht bring encouI"!lgemerlt and cheer into the Ii vea of the by preqchln~ the Ipsl. 19iUtrl to miner~ In a letter to hiB brother Thea, he referred to the miners ae be IVincent VI~n Gor:-h, 'Pbs Complete LettEll1"s of Vincent Van G:pgh, ed. V. W. Van Gogh {GrAonwioh, ~onneDtiDut: Hew "{or-k (}raphio Society, 195f~), I, xxx. 6 eorrowt'ul, who needed "the Master who can comfort and strengthen becau~e sorrow~ He is the great Man of who knows our i11s."1 All the mi~ery and poverty of the miner~' life beeame known to Vincent as he took part in the minere t etruqgle to better thoir existence, devoting himself 6spe cially to the care of the sick end tho sounded. Literally .very~ practicing the teachings of Christ, Vincent gave away thing, to help those in need--his money, clothaa and even his bed. He slept on the floor end wore the same kind of clothing &s the minaret rough jute saoke. When the church a!.l thori ti es taLma him in this eonai tlon, they oonsider-ad him unfit to represent them and ended his employment. So mucb zeal in being n,'lfriend to the poo.t' like .Tesue was, 112 hrl.o completely g'otten out of b"und. unbeooming ':ie ~~ Sucb oon6uct was representative of the church; his actione "sere totally l.u'lauthorizad gnu beneath the dignity his position as a paetor. Now in July of 1879 Vincent Mal without. job. ensuing daye to come were the moet bitter of bis life. 1 , I, 184, (L127). The ---------------\ 7 two very 9 trlk1ngly 'beatltiful letters to Theo that revealed ttle inner personal needs of all men" whioh later as an artist, he began to 5xprems througb bie own symbolism. He wrote the first letter from Wasmes, disclosing bis extpeme loneliness in maklng t<nown to his brother bow mucb a recent visit from him nleant. 1:!ben I saw you. again r,md walked wi tib you, I had the same feeling which I used to have raot'e tban I do nO~I- as if life was s ometbing r~ood and preQi DUS W'hich one must value; and 1 f'elt more cheerful MId a11\1'& than I have for a long time, because gradually lite has become less preoious, much more tmimpo.t"tant and indifferent to me--at least, it seemed so. When one lives with otbe~~ and is united by ,9. feeling of atfect:t on, ona is al",,~re of a f'eason tor liVing and pepoeiv€i11l thqt one is not qui ta worthless and superfluous" but perbaps good for something • • • like everyone else, I feel the need of family and friendship, of affeotion, of family inter cours €I; I am not made of B tone or iron" like a hydrant or a l1ii.mp post, so I cannot mise these things without baing conscious of a void and feeling a laok of: s~me thing, like any other intelligent and deoent man .. With TheD, Vincent could exohange the moet intimate of t!1oulShts, w~e I'DI' he l'{fHi~to1 concerned about him. that Thea was on~ hlltflan being who In another letter, which was soon to follow, Vincent reveals his frustr~tion in being now idle hopelesely imprison him and one senses an inw!l.~d deeire for aation tbat will lead to a produotive pOl'leful life. I1bi~., I, 191, (L132). consuming pur 8 A caged bird in 6pring knows quite well tbat he might serve s orne end; be 1s well a:ware that there 1113 something fop him to do, but he cannot do ltv What is it? Fie does 110 t qui. te remember v 'fhen some Vague ideas OC<HlP to him, and he says to himselt', H'Phe others build their neste and lay their eggs and bring up little ones,!! and be knocks bis bead against the bars of the oage. But the cage remains, and the bird ia maddened by anguish. "Look at that lazY' animal," says anotbe~ bird in pl1ss1ng, fthe seems to be liVing at ease." Yes, the prisoner lives, be does not die: there are no outward signs of what passes within him--bis health is good, he is mora or les~ gay when the Gun shines. But then the sea~on of ml~ration comes, 'and attacks of melancholia-- II 13ut be has everything be wants,fI gaY' the children that tend him in hi. cage. He looks through the bars at the overcast sky wbere a thunderstorm is gatbering, and inwardly be rebels against his fate. "I aT!'! caged, I 9..f\1 caged, and yeu tell me I do not wan t anything, fools! You think I have everything I need! 0b! I beseeoh you liberty, that I m~y be a bird like the other birds! A certain idle man resembles tbis idle bird. And circum~tanc.s often prevent men from doing things, prisoners in I do Dot know what horrible, horrible, most horrible oage. There is aleo--! know it the deliveranoe, the tardy deliverance. A Justly or un jus tly ruined reputfi tton, poverty, unavo1d·'lble air-cums tanf'l's J [lavel'si ty--tbilt is what makes men prisoners .. Tbe above two letters reveal the empty caVity of biB heart, where tbere is such a deep longi for s ympatb y and kindness, and such a deep need for- rriendsbip and understand i ~nd For- Vincent, the present annoyance of being penniless without worK, combined with his own personal loneliness 9 to augment his frustration to the br~aking point, where he literally eroiea out, I'My Goa, •.• is it for all eternity,?'t 1 Reference is made wi thin this same letter' as well as in oth~rs, ne~ded as to what is to give deliverance and Ii. berty to tbe f'riend16I!!s, the lonely. end the adversGid. Do you kno'w whrat frees one from this captivity? It 1e every deE'lp, serious affection. Being friends, being brothers, love, that is tcfhat opens the prison by some supreme power, by lome maBlo foroe. Witbout tn!., one remains in prisonl 2 Love 1s a force of Godis opposed to the dark and evil and terrible things ot' the wOI'ld and the dark side of 11:1."6; it is a force of resurrection stronger than any ao t and 11 ray of hope which gives eoneoiouElrJess arH:'I securi ty to the depths iiU'JO the secret of the heart. 3 FDr Vincent, love possessed the neoessary p01.rer to g 1 "1' a :LnWBrd hope and seeu1"i. ty,. Lova wa.s Vincent IS answer for all tbe problems of man, &'16 this wat! t'1bat he had Bought to @!iva !lnc to bring into tbe sick, des ti tute lives of the Borlnl1ge miners. no had of tan of love as being tbe ~poken foundation ana light of the Gospel. Love from above, was for Vinoent something very speoial; a love that was imparish able, that could suffer and endure all the !'tight of the \"lorld, II This love was the Biblioal s:rmbol of Chriet. 4 1Ibi:-d... 3Ib1~., thing~. I, l4S, (Llll). 41bid., I, 147, CL112). 10 You kn0l4 how one of the roots or founda.tiona, not only af the Gospel, but the whole Bible il "Light tbat risee:! in aar>kness, II from dar-knees to light. Well, who needs this most, ~ho will be receptive tD it? Experi enCE; has shown thq t the people who walk in darknees I in the center of the earth, like the miners in the black mines, for instance, are vary muoh impressed by the words of the Gospel, and believe them, too. l Vinoent's one vocation had been to teach and preach the l'ford. He would s peek of" the need to be born a€rain to eternal life, to the life of Pal th, Hope, 'ind Che.ri ty. The heart of man, to Vincent, wse very much like the sea with its gtorms, its sorrows and frustrations. Rest and peace from the storme of life could only be found by looking to the One ~mo was the Comforter and the Savior of men. Tbe heart that seeks for God and for a Godly life has more storms than any other--have you not heard. wben your heart failed for fear, the beloved well known voice with something in its tone that reminded you of the voice th~t charmed your childbood--the voice of Him whose name ie Saviour and Prince or Peace, saying 81 it vere to you personally: "It Is I, be not afraid. Fe~r not. Let not your heart be troubled." And we whose lives have been aalrn up to no~, calm in compa~ison of wb~t others have felt--let us not fear the 9to~ms of life, amidst the high waves of the sea and under tbe grey clouos of the sky we shall see him aDproachtn~, for whom we have gO often longed and T/latched ... Him we naed e~ ... -,~nd we shall hear His voics! It im I, be not arraid. The culmination of being loved, qcoepted, oond under stood, W~g for Vincent, synonymous with his understanding of God. Vinoent believed love to be the attribute of God; He 1 Ci., I, 177-178, (L126L 2Ibi~%., I, 8.1-91, (excerpt from Vinoent's sermon) .. 11 was tbe comro~ter, the creator, the make. of all tbin~s, tbe One above: I t"b 0 gave life, bopeand h applnen~s to the human heart. God knows us better than WB made us a.nd not He ourselVt1HI. know oursel ve e, for He HIEl knows of what thinllS we have need. He know8 what is good for us. May he give ue His blessing on the seed ot His word, that He has sOW'n.in hearts. God helping us we snaIl get through life. orr Vinoent's dismissal in JUly of 1879 along with various other incidents combined to undermine his faith in the cburcb. The bebavior of the Synod bad deeply disappointed him. His ecolesiastical 9up8~la~8 bad made him aware of the vsst dlf~ ferenoe that can exist between the letter and the spirit of the Gospel. The lack of underst~~ding and the ioy unc~ncern of the cburch showed Vincent quite aloarly tbat their standing resulted in many a oi tter a.r~ument. On one occasion the P~gtor cur~i~gly told Vincent to le~ve the heme. Vincent d bis f'3.ther at one period In his lif'e a..'1d now hE! \':'151 much digi l1Ll~ion~d. The un-ChriE'tian bsh'lvior of hie father a:f1d of the church convin(~,(,Hl him tha t their Hbole system of religion was borrible. Vincent had never been able to resist the temptation to d 1"'llW smd it I'J Don became 9. Ii bar-a tiG!:l for him. Hi~ in ter eet and devotion to art were as sincere as his love Df Christ, 12 a:nd it blossomed into a new religious voca.tion. rami) ined the s'ame only tbe means bad changed. The aim His art became the vehicle through which he f'!'xpressed "tt"U\9lf Chr1atilin ooncern, c::)mpal'l~icn and love for nis felloW' man. The letters that followed within tbe months and years to come, held many t·n-! tten inferences I'elctting to the pur pose !lnd objectives of' his art. Here are only & few excerpts taken from his many letters. OCtr puppose ill! in the f1r13t plal1'3 98H'.. ref:::Jf·rn by means of Ii. h 'ancH c!"!1ft lind of in tercours(~ wi ttl nature, believing as we do tbat this is DUP first duty in order to be bODest with otbers ~nd to be aODsistent--our aim is walk ing with GDd • • • it is our firgt dutl to fIx the heart on high, ana this feeling forces me to reeomrnena to you, brother to brother, friend to friend, preparing yourself for a life based on simpler principles. l Las t year I t41"ote yO!) a g rea t many Ie ttere full of ~m too bugy puttinq tno58 reflections on love. Now ~ eame thing~ irlto practioe. 1 t eeeW1S to me a painter t S! duty to try to put an idea into hi~ ~ork. In tbis print I have tried to express (but I cannot do it ~1811 or so strikin~llf as it is in .... reality; this il merely a weak reflection in a dark mirror) wh~t eeems to me one of the strongest proofs of ~..... the eJxie eEl of "quelque choee la-hliut!! (something em hlgb) in which ~111et believed, namely the existence of God and eternlty .... -oertainlJ in the irfinitely touching expreesion of suoh a little old man, \'I!oic:h he himself is perh3pe unconscious of. when he i~ sitting quietly in his the fir's. At the same time there 19 something noble, somethlnt~ great, whioh cannot be destined for the t-torms, rfilr'a(~ls has painted it so autifully. In Ie 001'"1'181' by Tomt~ Cabin, the mOlt beautiful passage is perhaps the one Where the poor slave, sitting with his wife fDr the la~ t time I 'l11d lmo\.tlng be rous t dis, remembers the words t e CD~plete Letters of 13 ItLet cares like a wild deluge come, And storms of sorrow fall, May I but safely reach my h~me, My God, my H8~v.nt my sll." An artist neednft be a olergyman or a churohwarden, but he certainly must have a warm heart for bis fallow l'I'lsn .. 2 CH/\PTER IV Everyone can recall past expa~lenoes that are remindera of tragedy, sorrow, and disappointment, remember ing times of loneliness and depresSlion, and the illeeming futility and meaninglessness of existenoe. Beoause of tbese universal experiences, Vincent's art relates in a very per sonal way to the problems and needs which confront all of rIl/ll'lkind. HiSl paintings portray an inner at tUl1tion lr..nown to ,all men, w1 th 1 ts impulses, urges and yearnings, its Impedl t'ien ts ~lnd frus tra ti one. There is however', muoh moX's expressed in bie work than tl1e problems and needs of roan, for alongside tbe problem, there would often be the plausible solution. into the Vincent's gospel transformed his solution of love ~yrobols of raith, hope, and charity. Tbi@ was hie fID!Hler for a confused and needy \"orld ,'ir-ecting those who walk 1n darkness to look above, to seek ~he Light, the Source and Giver of life and love. Ll ke an y man there 1.481'8 times of a wavering rai th, of doubt and deferltiem. but a long walk under lID open ~ky amidst the handiwork of the Master Artist, would soon renew his f!lith and bring hope to his heart onee aga:ln. of t inGS After many se walks he would write to his brother about his feal cDnce~nin~ what he bad seen. It was as if Vincent 1$ looked upon all of nature to be symbolioally linked with the struggles of tbe poor, the needy and the lonely, the queet for God, .and the recognition of the eternal and the inl'lnite. Sometimes I have sucb a longhlg to do landsoape, just as I c1"'Q.ve !l long walk to refresh myself; and in all nature, for instance in the trees, I see expression and Goul, so to speak. A row of pollard wl110wrn some times resembles a procession of almshouse man. Youn~ corn baa something inexpressibly pure and tender about it, which awakens tbe sarna emotion as the expression of a sleeping baby for instance. The trodden grass at the roadside looks tired and dusty like the people of the alums. A few days ago, when it had been snowing, I saw a group of Savoy oab bages standing frozen and benumbed, and it reminded me of a group of women in their thin petticoats and old shawls which I had Been standing, in a 11 ttla hot-water and-coal shop early in the mornIng. When one is in a somber mood, how good it is to walk on the barren beach and look at the grayish-green gea with the lon~ wbite streaks of waves. aut if one feels the need of something grand, something infinite, some thing that makes one feel aware of God, one need not go far to find it. I think I see something deeper, more infinite, more eternal tban the ocean in the expreeaion of the ey.~ of R little bqbJ wben it wakes in tbe rrJorninr:!, and coos or laughs because it eass tbe sun shining on its cradle. l Li f(f) wi tb its miseries, 1. te burdens and SOl' rO\<IS, was for Vincent, testimonial to his belief concerning the Genesis account of original sin, the fall of man consequences. reco.t'di In a rew of hi~ lettar~ ~nd ita he referred to tbe of man'e fall and expulsion from the Garden of Eden. 16 For Vincent, the laborer was seen as a direct descendant from a d1.8obedi~nt Ada.m, who fell from Paradise. • • • Who are those that show some SiRDS of higber l1fe? They ara the onea wbo merit the words, laborers, your life is dreary, laborers, you suffer during life, laborers, jOU are bIassed; they are the ones who bear the signs of a whole life or struggle and constant work without ever faltering. 1 • • • I prefer to see diggers digging, and have found glory outside of Paradise, where one thinks more of the several': brow. n2 uTbou ahal t eat thy bread in the swea.t of thy To give furthar insight into this last rema.rk, the following 1s an excerpt taken from Genesis, Ohapter 3, which ooncerns the event and verses to which Vinoent bas referred. Adam aDd Eve had sinned by disobeying Godte one command to not eat of the tree of the kno~ledge of good and evil. Because of this, the world was altered and became no longer a Paradise, and man, no longer perfeat, vas to labor for his food. NOW be became eu~ceptible to pain, old age and death. To the woman he (God) said, ! will greatly mUltiply your pain in childbearing; in pain you shall bring forth children. yet your desire eball be for your hus band, and he shall rule over you. And to Adam, he said, Because you have listened to the voice of Jour wife, and bave eaten of the tree of which I bave commanded you, you shall not eat of it, cursed is the ~round beoauss of you; in toil you shall eat of it all the oays of' your life: thorns 'lnd thi$tles It sh'l11 bring forth to you; and you shall eat the plants of the field. In the sweat of your faoe you ehall eat bread till you return to the ~round, for out of it youiwere taken; you are dust, and to dust you shall return. J lIbid., I, 16~, (L121). 21010 ., XI, 36, (L2S6). 3 Tne Bible, (King James Version). --------------------11 The Chris ti an, like Vari Gogh, relates the Genesis aocount of roM's fall to hie pr'9liHmt imperfeotion; the after effects are seen in man's inability to oontrol the good and the bad fo~oes whicb seem to war witbin him. Tbese fopces oan either work for peace, love, and respect of the individual and his worth, or they can exis tenee. thre~ten man's very Symptoms of this confliot--cont'us ion, fear and loneliness I and the In.a.bi 11 ty to love--preval1 toda.y to an even greater extent than ever before. Vincent's art, however, does rJOt eolely dwell upon the forlorn a.nd the problematical a.spects of life; bis main purpose was to uplift tbose wbo were troubled and downtrodden of 8pirit. His art did not seek to undermine or to corrode the values of life, but sought to bring bope, with tbe pur pose of re:ns!Aing man's contact with the Divine. wsre a bridge that could unite tb1~ His symbols world lId.th the t"zorld beyond .. Vincemtts symboLism, or the recognition of it began before hil career as an artist, when he waa between the ages of t\in~nty- ree and twen.ty ... four. At Am£l! terdam, in 1677, he 'l.vas nlfiking preparatorY' s tuo y in ord er to pas s a s ta te tlon for training, re~ Ii 1 ttance in to a (1n1 VOl'S i ty. could BrB ex,amina wi th furtber properly ordained for the ministry. tbe first written inferences appeaped in to tlls brother 'l'heo, that denott!!d tbe of God and bis blessing. Slm I1S 18tt<!n"'~ sent ing synonymous 18 I ge t up very earl y in the mornirlg; li-lhan the sun rises over the yard and th~ workmen come pouring in after a while, the sight from my window 1e so beauti ful, I wish you were here. tHll it b. ~iven me to sit on such !l. morning wf'iting 11. sermon !tHe malt.th ~i. ~un toris.on tbe evil andoD the BOGa,A Dr 'Awa~e thou th~t sleepest, and ari!. from the dead, and ""hrist shall give tbee light." on, This last phrase. t'Aw:ake thou tb!lt steepest, and arise tram tbe dead, and Christ: sball give the. light, II is very significant in relation to a painting Vinoent completed jUEt three months before bis suicidal death. tion of tbe sun as a God symbol, !@ ing. eonfi~ned The interpreta by this paint He enti tied it lI'rbe REHiHu'reotion of' Lazarus, i1 Vincent bad I1tted his compofiiJi tioD from a frag ('F'igul"O 1)" mant taken from tbe lower rigbt band corner of a Rembrandt etching (Figure 2). Notice that tbe Christ figure plays a very prominent role in the Rembrandt etching. Tbe rich9~t darks and blacks are found l4i.tbin the shadrn,v'ed folds Df His garments" ThEH'!e darks attract the eye immediately to His: person a.nd I'elate to His importa!lce.. In Vincent's painting, Christ has been entirely omitted. has been replaced by a tI'ClMerH30ue sun. Its! the entir-El @cene. exaggerat~d size and brilliance bathes Su.ch a heavy predDminanoe of light and llow in the absence of Chrigt, can only signify the sunts lVan Gogh, .2,£. cit., I, 130, (LIO)). Van pp. 2 H• H. 'Jr':let~J I'be S,'lmbpli~ f.:.:~n~ua,ge of Vincent D~~h (Nem (or\{: 230':232. gc~}raw-Hl11 Hook C any, Inc., 1963), Figure 1. V'1f1 Gogh. rfTh~ {Reproduced ReeuI'rosction of Lazarus n by Vincent from H. R. ':iraetz, The Symbolic ~cGraw·qi1l Book ~~ngu~Me or Vincent V9~ Ggs~ (New York~ Compliny, Inc., 1963), r•• <:,) .) Figure 2. liThe Reeu:rrection of Lazarus" tv Rem br'andt "rt.Hl Rljn. (ReprcdL:!(.:led from H. R. Graetz, 'hlS S;{mbollc . LanfltJ6ige ££.. Vincent. V.!!2 Gog~ ( \4 \"01'1: i'1cGrat.JHill Book CClmpany, Inc., 19b31. p. 2.;2.) 21 VlnC8mt's gospel of love found expression 1n an encompassing vsriety of symbols. The twili~ht of an ElVenlnll ~ ~ sky, the moon, the atars, the sigbting of a Village church, and the burning light of a lamp or candle, were all symbol. ioally linked to the teacbings ot Christ. But to discuss them hepe is of little value or importanoa, for they have no significant role within this author's work. There are, bow- ever, two other Van Gogh symbols whic:h do nead to be manti oDed .. Vincen t called If the good H in life, the lI,rayon blanc .. U This was everything tbat brought beauty, joy and happiness to the bumg,l1 he.art .. 1 1'l1e "rayon noirff! was just the oppo~ite .. The.y were the nblaekl! or ev11 represeHJtatives of sorrow, pain, loneliness, frustration, , 6-cC. 2 'rna most predominant syl'nbol in Vincent's art tbat ga\re expression to m3Jl'S· strurgle Rinst the "rayon nair" was the tree. Tbe tree, with Its branches outstretched against the sky like the gestieulat to overCD1Tl8 the \'11noe and e tOrtl'lS of personal poverty, adversity, loneline s smd m:Ls unders tana ing • e' tre€ s "Jh1ch be d raw and pain ted in tns proces s of hi s ,:mrk, from the willows of the Dutch plains to the fruit trees, the olive IVan 2nid ., (1,339a). 22 tree~!I at1d the cyp!"e~se13 :1ri the south of' J?rrance, fill strik ingly expre5s through the gr'aph1c gestlH"e of' bis brush, an inner world of turmoil. When ab~orbed spoke of tbem in the study of trees, Vincent often if they were Ii \fing beingS!, '18 PCg&'('HH~ln1! feel ings, tl"'ai tSl ,and chal"aetor1stios of bumans .. Now I htlV9 rO~1T, It finished two la.rgett dr9.wlngs. First, "Sor in a larger elze--only the figu:r-e witbout any sur'" roundinge . . . . . . The other, nThe Roots, II shows soma tree roote on some sandy ground. New I tried to put tbe same sentiment into the landScape as I put into the figure: the convulsive passionate o11ngill1.g to the eartb, and yet being half torn up by the storm. I wanted to expre82 90mething of tbe struggle for life In that pale. ~lender woman 'a f'i;i;1.u"e, as! tfell ag in the black, ~narled and knotty roots. l I ~aw ~ dead willow trunk •• • it was banging ov~r a pool that wa::! coveree t'll'1th reed., quite alene lind melancholy. • • .2 I want to sae bel' (Cbristine) immedl'1tely, that is as scon '18 I could • • • I found her 100 ng as the h she had withered--llterally like a tree which bad been bla&teJ(l bya cold, dry \'Jlind, t..Jith its ;roung shoots wi tbering; ano tornake. tb iog::'i c~rnplete, the baby ti?iS elck too. and looked Bhrlveled.~ . • .. The \..rind firs t s tri ak the row of country bous ,~s wi ttl their clumps of trees. • • .T'hos~ trees 14ere E!1Jl1erb: fio:ure I "'HiS "_.~oln(;/eo to , , there '.f"~"9 dr'ama in eacn l. "-" ~ay, but I risen in eacb tree.!+ I g )60, ( L19S' ) · I , !f,23, ( L220 ) II 51~9 , ( L268 ) • · 23 Vinoent 1 S early "Willc,w, II drawn in 1882 (Figure .3) waB typical ot his feelings tor trees. Notice that the twig~ tree's knotty broken branchel and conspiououl into the surrounding sky. stab Its i.solation, being !l'""ay from any other high standing tree or bUlh characterizes an atmosphere of despondent loneliness. Such a visual presenta tion of isolation, loneliness and frustration, denoted by its broken stump-like form, cou.ld have been obt\raot~1"'i8tio ~anvas during the time in tmich this of Vincent's DlIJ'n, painted. The overoast slqr speaJrs so clearly of impending often tnok miU'1y other formS! in Vincent' 9 art. fo~ the Bun; at other times, it was barB ing tre~s, O~ further yet reduoed to just brllnah upon the :!:r-oLmrL ~Jhile Sometimes 1t ~mong ~ wae other flourish stump or a broken the light from above, the sun, symbolized his ~ospel tree eXpI'E'.Hleed bis gtrugrs;19. ':L.11d the broken branch or stump 1 defeat and fruetration. symbolized hl~ art which W~B Vinoent.s p~lnti of faith and 10v., the gnarled, knotty used B were never static, even in his earlier ere was always ~ close relBti~n9hip pp. 21-23. between movement 24 ~nd space in them. It was as if hie painted stretches of la.na, mountains 11 clouds, orchards, and 11 ttle figures or object9--~ cart, a tra1n, the rays of tbe sun, wer~ all in motion. But it was a natural movement, rather serene and cheerful \olh tob seemed to und ulate rbythmically, like music across hie canvases. This movement, however, increased to a convul@i va wri thing and cburning in lt389 after his en try into q mental hospital at St. Remy. Olive trees and cypresses were Vincent's favorite gub jects in the countryside of St. Remy. The cypresses qlways preoccupied him, hs wrote to 'rhea, and he ptdnted them many times. !3if.! and rnassive trees dominate h15 "Cypresses" (Figure 4) whioh be di~ in June. They werB built of curling spirals ""hlcb Visually seem to impetuously writhe in ':tlmost neurotic a~itation. Tbe same sWirling agitated brushwork is carried into all sections of the painting; fro~ th~ ground they oonti nue up into tbe mountalns and tres@ hi~h 1"1 sa fore l'ITi to the into the undUlating clouds in countless curved , . 1 1.lnes. the painti , but also a multiplioity of line posseBsing mxie ty and frus ing the~e tl~a tioYl. ~~hen Vi.ncent used a line pos e es s characteristios to paint his lendscape of trees, bushes, mountains and Bky, be communicated to the viEH4sr Plgure 3. "l1illow H by VirJofJ:t1t Va.n Gogh. (Reproduced from H. H. Graatz, ~. S~m.boli.o I,~n!tua[}'e of Vincent Van Gogh (Ne'toJ York: f1iJcfJra14-Hl11 l300lt Company, Inc., 1963) t p. 20~ ---------------------------.. 26 F'igure 1+. "Cypress8e" by VinCH3nt Van Gogh. i (He prod LlcHHj fro. 1"11 • R. Orae tz, l he :S~mbQ Ii c L ll.ng iJ age of Vlncen! Van GOllh ( '[orl{: r~aGraw- i l l 800k Comp,my, Inc., 19631, p. 186.) - ..---------------------_.. 27 meaning beyond just hie racognizable objects. just the:; paint~d Ona seee not objects, but objects communioating the qualities ot the twisted, jaggBd, nervous lines ueed to create tbem. With each object ex.presain~ its own app:re'" oensiveness and frustration. the entire canvas becomes a reflective mirror of' Vincent's own tormented emotions. Vinoent nevar accepted lite as !t wast he was always looking for tbat better and happier tomorrow, where there would perha.pa be found a little bit of sympathy, a littl~ hi t of kindness sl.'Hnm. tbe discovary of a friend. Though hie difficult character generally prevented him from find ing this, he always kept boping and longing for somebody with whom he could reside and work. Always wanting to live for Iillorllsbody, be was hopeful of finding a wife and having children of his own. Tbese were treasu!"€ls wbleb he oon tinually sought, but never found. There was however, always the distant but hopeful future which \'1119 to come.. Ithope n for a bet ter t,omorrOl"l This became I las tIy, another veray impol:'" ta.n t e ymbal to be found in bis art. It ,,.ras the one import!U1t symbol needed to complete hie p'ospel of love; it was need Vincent's could form fof' the completion of a Biblioal expression. ~oElpGl i1 waf;! nov! symbolized in ptlintt symbols whioh r\[ew ~restlitl1ent mese e of faith, hope md love. 'rhe flolJl"ishi.ng newness of spl"intt md i ttl buddi tv/iS I for Vincent, very ~ymbolic of hope. "Hope lt was seen in 28 the tender growth of young wheat, the fr~sbnags of g~ean turnips, and particularity in the sprouting of young tree shoots. The newness of spring was symbolic of a new and better day, a new lifa which could grow in the light of His love; a new creation wholely dependent upon God's mercy and goodness for continued life, growth and strength. • •• When the first yea~s of life, lifa of youth and adolescence, life of worldly enjoyments and vanity will perforoe wither--and tbey shall, even ~e the blossom falls from the tree--vigoroue new life enaots up, the life of love unto Christ • • • • 1 It is true there is a withering ~~d bUdding in love as in nature, but nothing dies entirely. It 19 true there is an ebb and flow, but the sea remains the sea. And in love, either for Q ~oman or fer apt. there are tlme~ of exhaustion and impotence, but tbere is no permanent disenchantment. 2 • •• A man, who finally produces &omething poigmint at the blossom of a hard difficult life, is it a wonder, like the black hawthorn, or better still, the gnarled old apple tree which ~t a certain moment bears blossoms Hhicb . are among the l1lQS t delicti te and 11109 t Virginal things under the sun. J • •• That'8 the artistic element. It seems to be weak now--but that new shoot will sprout and it will sprout quickly. I em afraid tho old tr~nk ie split up too much, and r say, sprout in an entirely new direc tion, otherwise I am afraid tbe trunk will prove to lack tbe necessary vitality.~ IVan Gogh, ~. ci~., I, 80, (L82a). 2Ibi~., I, 539, (L226). 3 U ')i!L, XI, 220, (LJ!~3). 4 Ibig ., Xl, 172, (L333). P------- .. _ CIiAPTEFi V SYMBOLHH1 OF THE AUTHOR In the beginning, all that was created upon the face of the earth, held within the morphology of' ite structure or being, alaments of' tbe eternal and tbe perfect. was not limited to sevent, unending time. pleased. OP Lifa eighty years. but was for all Man had total freedom to do and will as he There vas only one restrlation, one law that he was to obey. He was Dot to eat of the tree that possessed the knowledge of good and evil. With the .ating, however, came expulsion from Paradise, separation from God, and eventual dea tn. The e te:rnal cons ti tuent wi th in all forms of life was ~omehow lost. able eV61rlaetlng flan18, but easily be blo~m age and death. Life was no longer an unquench Ii frail .flioker tl'nt could out by the susoeptible 11ls of sickness, old De'lth became an intert..roven integral p'1rt of life which all would eventually face, and face alone • One seee the lifele!!ls reslJlts of dee.th all arotmCl, but there is no p'lrticipant who can tell of the actual experience. is a shrouded and mysterious thing, but to the 1e not oblivion, but 8 Death Cbri~tit1n doorway to the P'irildise that '4ilS loet. there restitution from the misery, the suffering, and the bestiality of 11 it can be f'oun(J. 30 Death, howeve~, still holds an axpe~lence of the unknOtrffi whicb man, for the moat part, does f'a'ir.. His mind rebels from d~.relling sobet'ly upon toe oilemrna of death, even when it oan be very near, wben it involves a loved one who suddenly passes away. Since death is a part of the whole of existence, it always ie eventually reokoned with, but many times one feels that the participator was bardly prepared. If Christian art is to loyally teach the truths of Soripture, it must also playa part in man'e redemption, wbere the issue of death must be faced. Alongside the love of God and the bope one has in Christ; there should also be seen the rea11 ty of awai ti.ng death and the penal ties from which one can be redeemed. An image such as thie, bowever, must be handled discreetly, in order for the viewer to con template beneath the surface to tbe harsher realities within. The choice of Ii death symbol must not approximate too closely the real thin~, as to repel or make the viewer too uncomfort able.. ath that 18 fOtmd t41thin nature certainly COf:l118cted enou~h i~ d18 from the coffin and the funeral home to be 8ucceesfully used as a means of drawing the mind towards a death situation. mally ~huflder When crossing a Cield, one does not nor a.t the sight of a dead tree, or oringe when stumbling upon the bones of a bull. JU8t the recognition of feelinF'~ Hbone!! i teelf can be sufficient enouC!h to l'1rouse death. Done formation that does not rely too heaVily upon of ->--------------_.._-----_•••••••••• 31 the human could sucos@efully be used. In fact, any reference to bone, muscle, tendon ,:md inne1'" body functioning that is anatomical in renditi.on, cm also be simulative of death. An!itom~r !~md its depiction of the human booy normally iEl not that closely connected witb death to awakeD 111 feeling. fo~mations t,Jhat about combining human and animal bone into one bOoy or structural l<fhole'1 Or together Such an image would cer... tainly create a divorcement from the normal assooiation one has with death. Not only would it voice the inevitable deatb af all men, but of the animal as well, that deatb can infact all of nature with its poison. Being ransomed from the grave is tant face t of l"'EH:Jampti on I cart~inly one Impor but redemption b as a twofold pur- pose. There i a Thou~h sin condemns, the sacrifioe of blood redeems, tar 9:190 de Ii ver,'lnce from the penalties of sin. without the shedding of blood there 1s no remission of sin. 11 of ~nquenchable fire only through the aro!s. This aspect of redemption needs alBo to be ""v-pv''''~O''''~ ",""",,,,u. vrh.~.t· "'A. ", .... "1 po: h~ ,~ ,. uld. -v'" ":I,ood ,<; I bo11 9\1m.·· J'" this penalty from which one ig redeemed? b~en as E!O 01 a ted wi ttl f1 re gnn flame. Pi 1"0 Itlhat could express . Rell has always j in its una on trollablc state, 1s frightening and dangerous. plainly of extreme pain and Buffering. 1 y It bespeaks not use it then 32 as ~ hellish symbol? A suggestive image of fire and flame could be incorporated Qmldst a death symbol of bone forma tion. One 140uld tl1en sea an implied envision of hell i teelf. '-Phaee proposed redemptive symbols in conjunction with Vincent's, will now be artistically used to express the nwhole fi of Scriptural teaching. ---------------------CHAPTER VI ICONOGRAPHIC SYMBOLS FOR A BIBLICAL E~XPRESSION Symbols presented wi tbin this thesis have related to one of three things. 1. They are~ Tbe consequent problems of mm aince bis fall from grace. (Symbols of man's lonelinEH'\Is, sorrow, pain, adverai ty, true traiti on, tee s trufl~le to overcome, death, tbe evil of life, the fear of danu1ation, the punisbmentof Hell ).... The knotty gesticulating tree, the anatomical formation of' bone, tbe suggestive image of' fire or flame, and the writhin~ cburning movement of form within spaoe. 2. GOd'S love g110Vm through Cor-1st, His tea.cbings, and the orcs s, gave alI men access to rUms ell:'" and a means of ~olving their ppoblema. (Symbols of Ocdte love to man, one's pereonal fa.ith in Christ, mants need to love and be loved, warmth, kindness, aceept :ince and understanding, all that which 1 on~s for. the gr; od and des i.rable ) --'T'be e heart 51 1m or Ii ~h t tilhich is above, that whicb is above Ilna beyond. ------------------34 3. The hope of redemption from tbe grave and the penalty of' sin. of Q (Symbols of Jr'61!H1rrection, of redemption, new day, !l brighter better tomorrow, the new nes $ of 9.'waken.lng life, to sprout and grow in tbe light of faith despite surrounding obstaclesl- ...The delicate fr'eeh flourfibing growth of spring and ita bUdding, partie ularly the ~prouting of young tree shoots. The latter two catalogued groups of symbols oombine to form ba.sical1~f the n~thole H brou~ht Group 1 1s of tbe New Testament. into union with Groupe 2 and 3 there is also formed a r'Bibllcal whole." The problematical life originating from the Genesis account of tt on \'111 th \'\ihen ~anle fall in combina 'res tat'i'ltm t tee.chinge I form the very 'Ienti ty!! of Scriptur~. to siMplify wh.t tn otlf!h t s i 1'llp1y 1. 0 9. f hq8 been said. the essential Christian this theei s to be expres esc th rou@th s ymboliem is ref'; ta tSIJlen tot' f\Jndamen ta.l theology which is: God or-aated the h'lor'ld 9I1d man ttl have fellowship wi tb re, but beoause of ence, f'ellot'H~bip man'~ self-will and disobedi was broken 'IDe! man's n"iture t,H1S 811 t('H"eCl from Di vine perfec ti on tc human frail ty and dea.th. 2. Life became d1f'fieult and problematica.l b3cauS'e man now was imperfect, subject to pain, loneliness, ..- --------_........_----_... 15 irritability, worry, truetratlDn, poverty, tear, etc. The ea.rth no longer .freely gave of ltfJelt to bener! t man. (Geneeis 3 :16.. 19) "In toll eat the pl~t9 of the fields. IOU sball In tbe sweat of your faoe you ahall eat bread till you return to the ground for out of :1 t you were taken. II 3. God loves the world for He ueed his Son as a saorifice for the ein of mankind. Dr tbe means by Christ became the mediator whioh oontaat restored between w~s The entire life of Christ was an out- man and God. through his bealing the gick, the lame, and the blind; Ue taught them to dD unto otbers as tbe, would have others do unto tbem 1 and to love one anotber. 2 Christian love was a solution for con querlng the problems of tbe world. 4... His resurrection gllve ml1n hops for tl better life, a life eternal, besides new hope in tbis life for He said, "All things work together for goad to tbem that love God 1f3 "Ask and you ehall receive, '14 j 1 '!'h e B:i. b Ie, Milt the w 7: 12 • 2 Ib1d ., Jobn 15:17. 3Ibld .. , Romans 8:28. !-i-Ibid", ~;YattheM 7:12. ---------------------- & 36 "Whatever you ask in prayer believe that JOu shall receive It, and you Will ll ... -etc. 1 The following ohapter will symbo11Qally illustrate this Chris tian phl1oeophy of life in painting ,and soulptural works. 11 number of graphic, DRAWINGS. PAINTINGS, Aln) SCULPTURE When dealing with people, Christ used parables con tinuously rer illustrating and instructing them in the things that pertained to the spiritual. He u~ed familiar everyday objects or incidents to illuminate His teachings. Christ's narratives of the sower,l the lost sbeep,2 the sown tares amongst the wheat,3 and the growth of the mu~tard eeed. 4 are but a few of Hie parables to be found witbin tbe gospels. He made use of them to veil the truth from tbose Who were not willing to see it. Those who really de~ired to know, would not rest until they had found out the meaning. The following series of graphics are also "vi~ual II Ii type of pru"able, fo!" like the spoken \0/01"0 hidden within an allegorical n~rrat~on, these works hold the graphic images of symbol. average mind deci~her It Bhould be B~id the One within ask then, how does the m~y meenin~ ~Drd behind euch symbol imagery? that much can be clphened from the ima~ee qlone; however, for full understanding, some verbal explana tiOD is needed. In th1~ instance, the author prefers to use 1 TI18 Bible, Matthew 13:)-9. 2 Ibid ., tthew 18:12-14.. 3I.b i d ., ~19. t the w 13: 21+ - 30. I !"~J.bid., IVla t thot'" 13 :31-)2. a poem as ~ means of clarific~tion. It will serve as ~ key to opening the doore of understanding to the viewer. The poem (Figure $) will unlock the symbolic content of tbe l The symbolism now should not be difficult to drawings. una ers tand. 'rhe majority of these drawings are approximately fif teen by twenty-foup incbes in size. macH um of ink, conte- crayon Ill'ld They are rendered in tbe 009.1'"00a1. All basic exp;'EUIS ally the same contentJ only tbe imago is varied. aecause of this, there will be nc need to discuso each individually, but only a chosen few. The first drawin~ that was completed within tni Ii! ser-Iea is seen inf"igure 6. Hare all the supa r ficialities of life have been cut away and one stands alone t~ face the r'€ H l1 values and issues of life. formations of bono stretch upward. Swirling agitated One can sense a desire for release, for escape from the envelopment of blackness. 1s a ~lOrld::> death, bl1t is it death? Here 'fbers is not the rest rul repo@o of eternal sleep, but the stance to fight and etru~gle. seems A feeling of unfulfillment, of longing and desire permeate rsstleesly throughout the entire image. t 8one, muacle, and tendon, though crowded togetber, seem so isolilted. Each bet.utile hie own sta.te of loneliness, tioD, the want of release from life's many problems. fru~tra- One f08la the wieh of being found, of beinq restored to Dompleto nS[HI, tD ~·lholene8~ of the pl1;}reical, the 8001;11, and the LT'he /luthor, r'i;/ll"fll1ret Mae Armagost, t'Lld specifically dedica.ted this poem to fhe writer of this thesis in 1972. --------------------39 Theae bones ot the living dead cry out. Son of' Man, can these boneE} live? In pain, they toil In sorrow, they writhe R'9 acbing for the Tbl$! unlrnownGoC! knows. Our dwal1in~ is tbe d!lrkne~s House the damned Damn ad to Ii v1ng Alwaym raQcblng to see, But never seBin~. Who ehall give us 11Bbt? We have only the brightness of our burning Tbe valley of the shadow of death Alive with frozen f~ames. Give us 11ght! Let uS! se~! of I am the ligbt of" the wo!"ld. The people that have ~.H\nder'ed in darkness Have eeen a great light • • • But bara from tbis darkness, Seeds to sunlight We strive to grow, Only growing Old. As the grase withereth, And the flower fa.deth, Evan ea--old w~ die. We are entombed. DIJet wrapped in wood and steel And sculptured stone JL.'10 buri ad • Thy de~d man shall live! people, I will open your graves And cause you to come up Out of your graves. I am the I'EHiHJrrection. He that believeth in Me, Tbough he were dead, Yet shall be live. Oh, ~rBve, where is thy Victory, '01:1 death i.rhere Is thy stl I am the light of tbe world, The re!urreation, And the Ii fa. '( o• -J)~ (l) k :1 ~ Gi~ .r! N eX, .-l 41 o Z £'--it @ H >( :::5 tnl:: ortcc' [r.,ri ---------------42 apt ri tual. If all tbie 'were to come true, then sueh a da:rk world would beoome bright iii ttl the light of happiness.. is' 110 S', ug gas ti. on There of it hapP€Jning ber's, however, for tnt 8 is a world olltBide of Di."lneLu11on arH:l fellowshiP. !1 t<1orld f,g,11en from grace, and banished from Paradise. Figure 8 basioally contains tbe same expres9ioD, except Onoe again Van Gogh's content i~ felt for a few additions. througb the upward I"EHl.ohing of two bull skulls.. Here also one feels that deep, desperate emotlon is on display.. Humans do not generally ehare Dr express eucb strons feelings of unhappiness, but usually try to hide or suppress sucb feelings \41 thin toe self'.. ErliDtion as forceful and personal ''is this would be very difficult to adequately express through an aCHleptable human image. Stl'ong emotion mirrored through human repr'811Hmtation could He could cau~e Ii! emblrrasement for the viewer. 0 EHlsl1y identify with it al'10 seeing bimself would reelin~~ become self-oot'lElcJUie. \iithln this drawing, deeply human ae well personal, has been projected upon the animal. One OIID (15' ~til1 but it becomes less that is feel with the emotions of the animal, pEH"fEOnlll. Identification t~itb abject and the struggles of its existence becomes intimate wben viewed through oolirnal formation. the death 18S8 HUl2l!U1 fOl"11'1 envelopea witbin the animal, but the abstractive qua1it Jf of tb e wb ole €Inc ourages id en tiflcs. t1 on 108 El' !Uld pe- J~cho 10151. C '11 distance. Stylization find 'lbstraction ahJ promote is 43 distancing and lack of identIty.1 Notice that this drawing does not express the hope leesness of the other. ~ra Even thougb the formations of bone fundamentally dark and forlorn, the su~roundlng space is filled with light. Sunshine floods in through the window, and with it comes a note of warmth and chaer. The warmth of God'S love and concern is for all who would come and believe. Such symbolism ie easily understood if one only takes the time to read the introductory poem. The poem reveals the light to be synonymous with Christ and also speaks of Him being the resurrection. He reigns above all, restoring peace, happiness; and life everl~sting to the believer. One other item needs to be mentioned. Witbin this drqwing there can be found four embryonic formations of new and growing 11fe. The reason for this will be explained. Within the totality of life's experience one sees not only death but the creation of new life as well. While death continues to taka ita toll, there is always new life to take ite place. tint! to Life continues to perpetuate itself from eratjon. 'fh~, ~enera- eprinkling of embryonic form amidst this continuing that of bone la 8imply a means of expressl cycle of life and death. Pipures 11-15 have additionsl redemptive content tofore have not been p. dlgcu~sed. In ~ll five lU;dmund L51H·ke ldman, Art 'is 1m.apie and Idet:l lewood Cl:lf'f~, N€lw Jersey:--rrentice ... Uall, Inc., 1'167), 6. • . . Figure 9. crayon, and ink. Drawing No.4. Medium: ~Hze: 24 ft x: 18." 46 Fi~ure 10. crayon and inl't. Drawin~ Sized 24f! No.5. it 18. n Medium: charcoal, conte 47 drawings one finds some reoognizable form of crucifix or image that relates strongly to Cbrist's death. One does not see a crucifixion, but symbols that speak of its event. There ie no desire to conooct or reconstruct a staged cruoifixion where "you are there" a.s a partioipator. there are pointing reminders. Instead. Reminders that say to bear in mind tbe cross witb its cruelty. It is tbe only means by which atonement is made for the sins of mankind. The true meaning of redemption, expressed in ite oompleteness, can be sean in Figurea 1Z-14. Alongside the death imagee of Chriat and His oroes, one aleo saes the incurring judgment that await~ the unbeliever. 1s disbelief there is no remission of sin ~nd Where there without the pardoning of Christ there is the penalty of damnation. Damnation 1~ easily envisioned witbin these three drawings. One ease bone, musole, and tendon gradually being oonsumed and transformed into flames of fire. eo severe that it twists and deforms. the agony of their burning. criee for deliverance. There 19 sensed pain One ean alroo9 t feel Each tortured form soreams and While in their agony, they struggle upward, to reach, to gr!.l9p that whioh oan give eeonpe--the Christ symbol of atonement. In drawings 4~6, (Figures 9-11), the hurnan element has the dominatinrr role over tli'~t of the animal. The bUl11'h'1 bod y 1e '1p proac hed through the academi os of ma tomy, but .. -----------------------.. 48 F'ip;ure 11. DI"awi crayon and inl{. Size: 1 No.6. H x 2LJ..!I charcoal, cont~ • 1"1 §! ure 1). Dra,.zing l~o. 8. Heditnn: crayon and ink. Size: 24'" x IB.ll en 'ircoal, oonte v--------------------__ ~-s;; 51 gure 14. c r""1. yon GI11 ,1 1. n k • Drawing No.9. ?4" x 111.!l S1 z C t ~------------------_.52 D ,( '" crayon F1 ur€! 15. Drawing • 10. ink.. Size: 23~11 x 18. j\'ledillm: II charcoal t cDnt~ . x!) • rl_""t N ~ t.. !< ~ C() ~.------------------ bit=: ..~ T 1" rl ------------------55 handled \41 th freedom. The liberty to deplu',Jt from true body etructuroe is neClatJIsary in order to exprese content thll!t this thesis prEH!ente. of all outward adorrUllent. ing notbing.. throu~b fom the Mtln hera is seen stripped He stmdl! alone and naked, posSlees ... One views the body in stages of dissection. Disseotion begins through the skinwnd ribs to open cavities tbat eventually lead to tbe back vertebrae. cal being or m,an is in a sense on display. Tbe total pbysi ODe sees not the perfect Adam of Paradise, but something vet''! mortal. The partioular mortal seen in Figure 11 seems so unprotected, so susoeptible to hurt and pain, lonel1neas and sorrow, sick.. ness md death. Figure 18 is the only drawlr'l(2: that oomes comparati vely The purpose of the work, bow 01088 to being portraiture. ever, trlae not to recapture another shQl10w sentimental Christ in tbe natural but to present His image through symbol. The line used to oreate the total image is tense and apprehensive. There Is also sensed a feeling This tension iii l2rl!lsil,Y felt. of ~adnese, fear, and great anXiety. This is the Chriat 01' Getheemane who could foresee the onslaught 01' tbe oroes. One aan BEle Hie face take upon itself the very image of that croes.. The 'lrm9 brow line. of a cross Clln be seen extended along the Ita upright post is at right an lee to tbe crossing the transversal. It extends and also down along the nose. brCH>l, into the forehead His thoughts geem to be $6 Figure 18. Dr~win~ No. 13. Medium: aDnt~ orayen and ink. Size: 18" x 24." charcoal. .. .:: 0' ""; ..::"1• N Q) M K :::'.I til;:: dr"\ 0') t'L,..-.I --------------- a 58 directed inward, contemplating upon the frightening t9;sk tbat 1l1ye befor>eHim. It is as if foreknowledge tells Him or the awaitin~ pain and the awesome bU~den of ain that 1s to be laid upon Him. "Behold tbe Lamb of God, whicb taketh away the sin of the world." 1 Tbe last two symbols to be presented g.raphiaal1y wi thin th! s trH~e is are those, derived from Van Gogh. there is the tree. 1"11'61 t, Vincent maw it as the t1pi.fier of his own personal mtrugglings. The aeoond symbol is spring. Its new buddings was for Vincent the symbol of renewal; hope, and resurrection. Both at these symbols C~"l be seen in F'igurae 16 and 17; the t~ee symbol oan also be seen in Figure 20. lotice the tree in Figure 16. oertain outstanding human characteristics. ane eees only a burned out etump. It leems to bave At firet glance Wi to closer examination, one notioes that two of itl broken branches resemble up lifted arms that rallon h8tl.venwClrd. r8sEHl1ble~ thQ.t of Iii The stump's top also head look1.ng upward. \H thin tbe head there 1B an eye-like sooket tbat Is attached to a long Sftout 11ke proj~ation. Ifu"'ge and open. One aleo gees tbe semblance of a mouth, Here is man personified, struggling upward, olt"Jring aut, res-ching in belief for the One t4'ho alone can re~urraot the dead to new life, to healtb and happiness. That resurrection of new life Dan be seeD in the palm of the IThe Bible, John 1:9. ---------------- ~>---~ r; i 59 l'!aw little shoots rise tree's most predominant branch. from that which seemingly la dead. tree there stands a man. At the left of the buront The feeling of extreme aBe Is felt in the clothes that he wears. Hia j'loket, f:1'We:£ite1" and pants all bave the s arne gnarled l'oot and bark quali ty that is found On tbe ri~ht 18,;g the 1"emnants of a in the old dead stump II large broken branoh. It reminds one of an ostl"!eh who has its'? helld buried in the sand. The darkest branch, whicb rests upon the ground and moves up into a large knotted form, could resemble the bird 'e head and neck. The top stUbby branch th il t repeats tbe h8nd form on the burnt tr'ee could also resemble the bird's tail featbers. expression of defeatism new 111'e or relHJrreC ti on believe. ana Tbie Ie Van Gogh's disbelief. CCH'I'l8S One notices tbat no from it. I t has nc fal th to The draWing !JUI a whole tben bespeaks of ageing t eventual deatb, and new resurrected life for the believer. Drawing 12 (Figure 17), 1 s a further varLltion of tbis same tl1erne. tion However, wi thin the troee there can be found addi content wFrlcb could usa an explar.iation. One notices tL'Pil. t marlY of ti1E~ tree t s hranches tend to resemble a IJ'ariety of' animal fornHitlon. lower right. A cat ... lit{e figure can be seen at tne On the left ~ide of the drawinB Bome type of iU'ltlered 1:tnim9.1 Cal') also be eleen. I·t. or deer. lin~ ~n it~ "'-".... baok. Tbe Just above th!t_ one .. 60 bird' &I leg, u.ptumed in a poel tion of death. Th0 one buman element found in tbe dra.wing ia hardly notioeable. va thin the dark reoe~seB of the tree's trunk, there emerges a faoe. Even though the eyes U"'8 totally conoealed in darkness, tbe nose becomes visible as 1 t pf"oj'ects into the light. One eees tbe mouth as one large open cUlvity lined tdt,b a sugges tion of teeth. t<"inding all of' e ucb content wi thin one broken tree eymbol suggests more than d~M.tb and ~he struggle to overOO't'l'l8. It speaks of death as an encompasslng thing, a dlsea~e of' the environment which spreads its infection not only to the human but to plant, animal and all of lifa. again the symbol of hope and resurrection can be treete uppermost branohes. S6en Once in the Sboots of rH~W lite rise up from that whiob 1& dead. The tree aymbol takes a different form in the last dr8wln8, Figure 20. slmdy beaDh. It is seen 8S a pieae Of driftwood on a The stru~H~lB to overeome is iigain felt through the restlEHHi Slgltl;ltion of' its: knotted form. PSllntlnglii 16 ... 18 ( They OSlI'f'y no l'1~HN gU1"6S 21 ...23) need not be ex.a.mined. symbolism which WfiI't''lnts \-tr'.tten !3.tten tion. Thsir symbolio content has been prev1ou@ly discussed in the dravin~ Beries. The last paint! J gura 24, con tinue. with the tree symbol being in the farm of drit ad. ~th a brio~e overpass, one gee~ 0 large tanglea m~ss of eath this dark over pass there is sensed no 11 t Dr warmth, ~nly the wet stanoh ---------a ~ .. 61 c.;; NN C\l (l) t.. \>I: .. 62 ~P""-- r' I 63 F. • o -;::. "t""!n' flo C\J "'p i:t~ .. rr'f\2 N~· c 65 rl o Ct. .'. :+(\1 N-y ;jj K $..0 ~~ '!'>'- .... <,:"; "'--'·.".'·..·..1·, Ct'" (\, -----------" r 66 Outside the sun 9~ln~~ br4o.bt. 11 "'.. J. o of rot and decay. tens upon the water where all is clean and freeh. differenoe is quite and death. ccnt~~at·ina . , e; <&. """" It glis- The th edirf . · Granoe between life When viewed in this light, the underpass becomes a net for entombing the dead. The flowing water beyond, becomes a God symbol, a restorer of life, liberty, and happiness. Further steps toward creating oontemporary Christian ioonography can be seen in Figures 25-28. Chairs, pioture frames, gathered bits end pieces from sofas and tables all combine to oreate these two pieces of soulpture. is symboliem that deals ~ith Hera again life, death and resurrection. In both examples, a multituda of furniture forms are encased in a type of box that haa the semblance of a coffee table. This box also has a resemblance to that of a hotbed whioh be found in any greenhouse. covered with glass ~d C'ID It is usually a bed of eartb heated by the fermentation of manure, for the forcing of plante. With this knowledge in mind, the various uprisings of furniture form could then be seen as D"~'~~a o"'Vl">..LLl('j -I t pane. N.,.'otl·~~.· t.·~t·'l~ .' ... "" t·~.~ lJ_ J. v .~.iven ' to eacb piece of SCUlpture, Resurreotion 1 end Reeurrection 11. both basicallv the " S!lme Tbey are Ilno p'ive l"ef'erenoe to the eartHS verses of scripture, 1 Corinthiron~, Chapter lS, Verses 3S-3B and 67 But some ona wlli ask, "I-3:ow are the dead raieed'? ~hitht' what kin~ of body do they eome?1I You fooliab man! ~ a you sow voes not coma to life unless it dies. And what you sow is not tbe body wbich is to be, but a bare kernel, per~aps of wheat or of aome other grain. But God gives Iv a body as be has cbosen, and to each kind of seed its own body. So ie it with the resurrection of the dead. ~~at is sown is perishable, wbat Ie raised Is imperishable. It is sown in dishonor, it is raised in ~lory. It is sown in weakness, it is raised in power. It Is sown a physi Dal body, It is raised a spiritual bod, •. If t~ere Is • physical body, there is aleo a spIritual body. These verses not only confirm the previous line of thought but also are a help in opening new avenues of thought for symbolic content. Meaning which may have been concealed up to now bas no more excuse for being indecipherable. The title in oombination with the just-quoted verses give the viewer all the necessary information needed in order to the full underet tho~e ~ymbol1c content that is held within two pieces of soulpture. doubting, only verification furniture ~ro There is no questioning or th~t these boxes of dismembered symbols of plant organisms. To help inorease tbls visual r8pr.~.ntation of re~urr.ct.d growth, brown paint hae been applied to the furniture bed and green has I1ppl1 to the develoclng ~ it ~urn 1· t ure oans. O·.·~ ~o· urse ~ w en black and white pnotographe are unable to show the oolor differchange in greys from dark to brighter ~ 1.· "!1'ht~ oan be ee211 in the oetail photos of Resurrection 1 1 1l be Holy Bible, .. 68 and 11, (Figures 26 and 28). cban~.\es . Notlo~ partioula~ly the lighter in some of the uprisin'!8 and "bud \oJA in ~et... 1t e the furniture forma of growth are covered fresher green. 0 ~ith as t'., eroe • All tbie lighter, Their color in combination witb the ver ticality of their stanoe, speak of many things. newness, of baing rebor~, flow from this green. Feelings of of being restored to life seem to Hera is hope and faith, renewal and reeurrection--life newly freed from the bondage of winter. Notice the contra9t between the verticle greens and the dark bOI'!zontal browne. Brown becomes the color of fall, bringing soon the enoroacbing death of winter. of both soulptures. They seem to be littered with the horizontal dead of last yearfs growth. horizontal death symbols spring, there ie no Notiee the brown beds r~semhle su~gestion They l1e broken and brown upon Even though these the furniture-risings of ot stretch or upward reach. th~ ground, unbelieving &10 defeated. The use of brown and green paint is also a help in the awareness af oertain relationships. discover! oloser examination, it is felt that there !il) ar~(ul1e 1"'elqti(:H1~blp bett~een the e~n ~d Ol" '1 in the upturned leg of ~ Chippendale, ~ Victori'U'l ch:lir, the fom of reo '. 0 fdl1 i Z Il'l (,~ • '1 does exist e!trueturing of pl'.lnts find eel' t9.i 11 form& ttl r} t c an be round in turn! ture. ex~rnpl~, With plant C'!!.1 For en Anne, easily be Wl>.I"'.~.'r.··l l~ced:in thi~ l.lpsiaa- down po~iti'Jnt the ,tva PO leg's toot becomes a large bUd, resting on Ii slender atem. From the bUd, the leg begins to swell in curves, movit!g down ward in.to a tb i.ok liino heavy trunk. The leg typifies the The Duncan Pbyfe, the Sheraton, growtb mr:nrem,;:mt of a. pl,mt. the l?rench Pro'l'fincial--in fact, just about any eeyle can be found to p09fl1eaa certain cbal'8.oteristice which relate to the plants' organic form. Once ag;ain. return to the verses previously quoted .. "hat is the author's purpose 1.r1 referring to the sown seed- tbe tact that it must die before the bod, can rise in the fasbioning of its kind? He uses it as a parable. As the seed must die before it quiokens to new lire, so muet man's physioal body dIe before he is resurrected to new life. Like the seed bears no 'l'"E'HH3Imblance to its:! radiSiDt ffresurrected" body, so likewise man'E!! weak and periehable bod~1' will have little or no resemblance to bis perfect spiritual body. s ~lke of symbolism beyond tta,t omss • symbol of nHm'@ ot the plal1t. This Tbe dead seed death and the new body the.t grOtl>1E' from it beoomes the symbol of man's new resurreoted body. r-e :1 S 'l s ymha 1 i em vl~u·tiole level of B e first level of geoond level ors ymbolislfl. WfiS th~ t of th9 gr-o,,,,ing plsn t- ... s ;ymboli ze~ by Bees of furnittJr'e t~ithin symboli~m boIs of hi. do~ is that of tl \'!'It:Ul--tne qnd resurrection. botbed box. seed "1nd 1'\113 second mt bel e sculpture then 70 • rl d o ·rt 4=' (.) ID s.. ~=: ~ . m{\) lDN ~ .. ~ ",C CD 1::'" r-4-H ~ . .. rl It) to 'L"'\ ~ :J t'::e 0'0 t\j ..... • tL .. ~n ~7.j C/) ..... ""'c:i" [l':d!'-' ::Jro .. c1' •• ::: \.0.) ;:;0 0'. (\) • L!l ::c .~ '1 Q) Q rt ..... Q ~ I'\) • • . ------aa. CHAPTF1R VIII CONCLUSION This thesia has purposely tried to pl'&sent Christian art that ie origina.lly frash a.nd contemporary. been an bone~t There has try to oreate ioonography that is new and yet still theologically sound. It ie felt that tbe iconography w1 thin this thesis does acoomplish this. Such iconography was created a 0161y upon thG toundQ.tions of scriptural teach ing. Ther~ has been a breaking awa.y trom tl"aditionaHsm. It is tel t that much tradl tional iconography of tbe church toda.y haa beoome weak in ita oommunica.tion. This bappens when the church lim! te i t~elf to accepting only that which is tra.dl tional :!ocmograpby: iconography that depicts its fOLmdaticm&l beliefa through oonventional themes that usually ~uprouna firgt century events. is restriction of pt th e ert1 ~ t repsa ting tb9 themes ttla t h a.v@ beoome so f'1f'1!iliru' that one beCOtl'HHI weary ..... ith sLicb repeti tion and r-ep(i}tition can only leila to oommunication loss, t,Jhen tradi tional iconOFa"3.phlc symbolism hu no longer the It' • t freetmass or cHlpabili ty to carry the full import O.i 1 0 meesag(\~ to ioon anlOGo!'11 world, then 1 t is time to create CH'Hi raphy. '. l~"l'~t,l'an idea of the fall, the t of aocepting the C~& a LIn! V~:H'8 ill i of' Bin and its sfrew ts upon the \lfO rId and wi tb 0< 75 the desire to point man to his GOd, thia tbesis attempts to rl'l!al{€~ steps toward creating that new ioonography,Tbe desire was to express 8piritu,~..1ity and religious feeling through new s ymbola that oould better relate to man in hie present world. Suoh reprEHilentat1 Yea of the spir1 tual tlera not taken from the pas t. Tbey were creations that eou8ht to express a scripturfil wbole. Emphasis was placed upon the total! ty 0·1' the \>lord and not upon events normally aseociatad wl th BibIloal s tory. tra,tes this. The art work presented t clearly iIlus .. Purpose end idea have provided a new direotion. The symbolic use of' liRbt, the upward reach of e. tree, death format! ons of bone and t4ood, the u~ly disharmonious use of lina, shape and movement have all oDmbined into one vehieu.. 1ar BtrueturlS for a f'r~ll!b £!pil'"it~al and emotiOl'H11 eXpr9!13 S i on .. peft]11y, th1e tbesis will mliJ{e .'1 emaIl Clontribution towards ttJ® IS1 9l1iI'ob for Chris ti '1n i conograpby toa t is mean" ingful W1d 76 BIBLIOGRAPHY Dillenberger; Jane. St:,rlaand Content 1E. Ohi"'letian Art" Nashville, Tennes see, liew Y01"k: Abingdon Pre&s, 1'96,.. Elgar, Frank •. .Y!.n Goa h •. r~EI1,J York, Wasbington: erick A. Praeger Publisher!, 1966. Fred... Peldroan, Etlm?,:nd Burke. Art a~ Im~I'E!. and Idea. Englewood Cliffs, r<et-l Jersey: Prentlce- dill, Inc., 1961. se Graetz, H" R.. ..!!:!.! S:rmbo1ic 1JWJgu. a .2£ Vincent Van Gogh. New York, Toronto, London: McGraw-Hill Book aomp~~y, Inc., 1963. Hazelton, Roger. A Theolot>l::ical A12eroacb to Art. Haeh ville, 'fenrHHH!ee, i'eH York: AbingdonPrll, 1967. Holy Bf hle. ng James Vel's! on" It Tr>!llbaut, l'1af'c Studio Book, Viking V!ln Der Leeu'W, ~~~s ~nl~~j: Sacred lind FrofaJia Beauty: Tbe bv! lIe, Tennmee, New Y'orln Abingdon rllrd!J8.. Van Gogh, Vincent.. Com~leta LE'ltters of Vincent Van Go~b • i ted b • ~!. 7 en Gogn • 3 vor~. Gre-snw1oh, Connecticut! H(H>1 '{ark 3raphic Society, 1959.