9 April 2021
Van Gogh haunts the Courtauld Institute
When in London, I often visit the Courtauld Institute at Somerset House. If I were eighteen all over again and if I had even a fraction of the Art-bug I do today, I’d re-do my life and enrol at this institute and learn everything about art history, art restoration and how to be a curator. Its collection of paintings is well-rounded and top-notch. But my real interest is the self-portrait by Vincent Van Gogh which is hung on a wall by itself in a large room overlooking an immense courtyard.
On my last visit there it was somewhat empty and I had the place to myself, so I was able to completely plug into it. This amazing portrait must have been painted within days after Vincent cut off his ear. I think there are two other versions as well, but it’s this one I find the most mesmerising in every painterly way.
Here in this room are large windows with luminous thin shades pulled down to keep out the midday light. This seems only to accentuate the intensity of the cool harmonies in the picture. It’s a beautifully painted portrait of cool and disjunctive color harmonies emanating from a dominant lime-yellow scheme. Van Gogh famously adored everything yellow and to every extreme on the palette; from buttery rich cadmiums to these limey green hues. In this portrait particularly, he used an unusual combination of both warm and cool yellow tones to highlight the delicate shadowy relief in his face. It’s wild but harnessed, no one had ever done anything like it. And it’s flat, like Japanese portraiture from which he learned everything and so cleared adored. And yet it curiously falls into line with everything so classically traditional that had come before it. In it there is Holbein and Rembrandt, and Titian too. There is even a Matisse in it, but waiting to arrive.
It’s also a complex painting despite its apparent simplicity. It’s so flat, and yet there is every indication of relief throughout its surface. The Prussian Blue hat which he also wears in the other portrait, with its black fringe, acts like a kind of black hole around which everything seems to gravitate.
Well,.. for me it is extraordinary, beautiful, and yes; perfect. But I hate that I write that because I don’t generally believe in any kind of perfection in Art and I wince at my own use of this adjective. Maybe I should qualify it by saying that it’s simply a truthful portrait, one that rivals his great hero, Rembrandt. But that would tell only a small portion of it. I'd say simply that it's the first truly Modernist portrait to appear. But it might also be possibly the very first portrait ever painted under artificial light from the newly installed electric lighting grid throughout France. Is that why he used so much cadmium yellow paint in some of these evening paintings??
One can only imagine what the uncultured and equally uninspired country folk of the 19th century might have seen: Ugliness! Brutality! Hideous insanity! Fortunately, we also know that Baudelaire once declared that often new and original works of Art can look ugly upon first viewing. So a picture like this forces us (me) to be on our contemporary toes. Where are the Van Goghs of today? Would I be able to discern them with a fresh but cultured set of eyes? It’s also a great reminder that artists cannot afford to worry about outside opinions regarding their work.
As I left the institute and found myself on the busy streets of London, I realised that mostly what had trapped me in front of his self-portrait was its humanity. So as a consequence, as I wandered the city streets I found myself looking for humanity and finding it everywhere. Aside from its skill, it seemed to me that only a painter of such heroic empathy could paint such a portrait. And yet remarkably, within it there isn’t a hint of sentimentality anywhere, just a plea, perhaps to God that he might be understood.