Vincent Van Gogh

‘Van Gogh and the Stars’ at The Van Gogh Foundation


On the last day in May, a constellation of 600 illuminated drones opened the 2024 season for LUMA and the Vincent Van Gogh Foundation in Arles. Accompanied by Joep Beving’s melancholy piano music and the croaking of local frogs, the drones swooped and swirled like a flock of birds in the night sky, shape-shifting, disappearing and reappearing, changing colour, their glow reflected in the stainless steel bricks of Frank Gehry’s tower. Specially conceived for the occasion by the Amsterdam-based artists Drift, the performance was an homage to fellow Dutchman Van Gogh and his La Nuit Etoilée (Starry Night over the Rhone). Painted in Arles in 1888, the masterpiece is now back in the city for the first time since its creation.

Discover ‘Van Gogh and the Stars’

DRIFT_Luma Arles_Drones_Courtesy of DRIFT

(Image credit: Courtesy of DRIFT)

Van Gogh lived in Arles for 15 months, during which he was mostly ignored or treated like a madman. But he was marvellously prolific, and his influence profoundly changed this place, along with art history itself. When Swiss art patron Maja Hoffmann started putting together her ambitious cultural plans for Arles, and created the LUMA Foundation 20 years ago, her father insisted she not forget Van Gogh’s legacy. In 2014, she broke ground for Gehry’s LUMA tower (whose architecture was inspired by La Nuit Etoilée), at the same time the Vincent Van Gogh Arles Foundation opened its doors nearby, with her father’s support. (She currently presides over both.)

DRIFT_Luma Arles 2024_Coded Nature_Image by Finn Bech

Drift, Luma Arles 2024, Coded Nature

(Image credit: Finn Bech)

For its tenth anniversary, the Van Gogh Foundation managed to borrow La Nuit Etoilée from the Musée d’Orsay until the end of the summer – no easy feat. The painting anchors an excellent show, ‘Van Gogh and the Stars’, which explores representations of the night sky, the 19th-century fascination with the cosmos, and the arrival of artificial light.

DRIFT_Luma Arles 2024_Coded Nature_Image by Finn Bech (1)

Drift, Luma Arles 2024, Coded Nature

(Image credit: Finn Bech)

Beyond Van Gogh’s masterpiece, the exhibition’s co-curators have brought together important works by more than 70 artists from 1861 to today. Some, such as Provençal painter Adolphe Monticelli, inspired Van Gogh, while others took inspiration from him. Among the many highlights are a Spatial Concept by Lucio Fontana, with holes poked into the canvas for stars, a colourful cartography of the sky by Augusto Giacometti in a telescope-shaped frame, Helen Frankenthaler’s immense night sky made liquid through her ‘soak and stain’ technique, and Alicja Kwade’s mobile with heavy rocks.

Chabas_Eclipse

Maurice Chabas, L’Éclipse ou les Neuf sphères (The Eclipse, or the Nine Spheres), unknown date. Oil on canvas, 30 × 34,5 cm. 

(Image credit: Courtesy of The Van Gogh Foundation. Myriam Reiss-De Palma Collection Photo: Wartin Pantois)

The exhibition ends with a new work, Nebula Watcher, by French artist Jean-Marie Appriou: a bronze sculpture of Van Gogh walking in classical contrapposto, his plaster head encased in a glass globe like an astronaut’s helmet. Appriou said, ‘Growing up, when others had posters of Mick Jagger on their bedroom wall, I had a poster of Van Gogh.’

Nearby, the LUMA Foundation launches its 2024 programme in two phases (the second one starting 29 June). The newly opened first phase comprises an interactive exhibition by Drift, a video installation by the American artist Diana Thater, and a four-decade survey of work by Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija (which includes a wonderful touch: a man making Turkish coffee).

Spilliart_Nuit

Léon Spilliaert, Quai d’Ostende sous la pluie (Ostend quay in the rain), 1924. Oil on canvas, 75 × 100 cm. 

(Image credit: Courtesy of The Van Gogh Foundation. Maître Binoche Collection. Photo: Adrien Thibault)

Like Van Gogh’s La Nuit Etoilée – in which the light from gas streetlamps seems to come from the stars – a number of these artworks also juxtapose nature and modern technology. Thater’s poignant Practical Effects imagines a post-apocalyptic world where the last being on Earth, a robot, cares for topiary animals in a garden. Ralph Nauta and Lonneke Gordijn, the couple behind Drift, merge science fiction (his obsession) and natural processes (hers). After researching the flight behaviour of starlings, the duo created two interactive artworks that use algorithms to mimic swarming. In one, Murmuring Minds, a field of blocks slides across the floor in reaction to a person’s movements, an unsettling experience that makes the viewer alternately hunter and hunted.

Čiurlionis_Rex

Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis, Rex, 1909. Tempera on canvas, 147,1 × 133,7 cm

(Image credit: Courtesy of The Van Gogh Foundation. M. K. Čiurlionis National Museum of Art, Kauna)

A few hours before Drift’s one-time-only drone performance, called Everlasting Sky, the skies over Arles were an unmistakable Provençal blue, and the night promised to be starry. ‘This place is very special,’ said Nauta. ‘When the sun goes down, the light reflects on the town in the most magical way. You see it, and you get goosebumps.’

Vincent Van Gogh Arles Foundation’s ‘Van Gogh and the Stars’ runs until 8 September 2024 (though the loan of ‘La Nuit Etoilée’ ends 25 August) fondation-vincentvangogh-arles.org





Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *