tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post7913574598666171490..comments2023-10-17T04:05:08.284-05:00Comments on Creating Van Gogh: Van Gogh the lefty--verified!John Vanderslicehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09312030415504335029noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-41465778275987824862020-10-13T20:21:44.202-05:002020-10-13T20:21:44.202-05:00Vincent used a photograph as his model to create h...Vincent used a photograph as his model to create his self-portraits<br />vangoghfoto.comfotojbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05390342755516884712noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-30771754549482658672020-10-07T03:51:17.667-05:002020-10-07T03:51:17.667-05:00Historians generally believe that Van Gogh did not...Historians generally believe that Van Gogh did not cut off his entire ear- rather, he slashed off his earlobe, which is soft tissue, does not contain cartilage, and could be removed quickly with a sharp knife and minimum effort. To cut off one's entire ear would mean sawing through a substantial amount of cartilage. It would take time and be extremely painful.<br /> Van Gogh was not left-handed. There is no mention of being left handed in any of his letters to his brother. This was a period in history when left-handed children were frequently forced to write with their right hands in school, which could result in stuttering and speech impediments. It is a traumatic process for the child. If he was left-handed, he would certainly have discussed it in his letters at some point with his brother.CCWhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05883985191630685640noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-83713189342254036522019-05-11T12:08:39.688-05:002019-05-11T12:08:39.688-05:00I am a lefty living with a righty. Things are alwa...I am a lefty living with a righty. Things are always getting flipped depending on who last used it: coffee pot, saran wrap box, etc. Look at the water pitcher and filling jug in his bedroom paintings. A lefty used that jug last. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01912097834025450152noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-19669564111022917802019-04-09T09:32:42.846-05:002019-04-09T09:32:42.846-05:00Some of the self portraits show Van Gogh holding t...Some of the self portraits show Van Gogh holding the palette in his left hand, which, if they are mirrored images, would actually be his right and suggest left handedness. Also, quite a few show him facing toward his right, so looking out of the picture towards the viewer's left, without any hands showing. I'm a lefty, and if I set up a mirror for a self portrait, it is to the right of my pad or canvas, so that I look to my right, my torso is open and I can use my left arm freely. That means my face also looks to my left, which is therefore to my right in the mirrored image. To a person viewing the image, I would be looking out at them toward their left. A bit of a convoluted description, but I wonder if Van Gogh was ambidextrous as he has painted himself both ways.flyingfishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03506254801382821448noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-70615040955824766992019-01-04T04:32:24.327-06:002019-01-04T04:32:24.327-06:00I am left-handed in drawing and painting, but have...I am left-handed in drawing and painting, but have to use my right-hand for cutting or anything where i need force. So it is perfectly possible. I wouldn't do a self-portrait where i would be painting with my right-hand, and it seems that he had a fairly obsessive and perfectionist mentality. Tonyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03546589757360268452noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-27918123290099585192018-06-22T02:18:42.331-05:002018-06-22T02:18:42.331-05:00Good article... May I share a haiku for Vincent v...Good article... May I share a haiku for Vincent van Gogh in https://youtu.be/ZmHLNeBOT_g<br /><br />stenotehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01036496407806809635noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-61286742883255198832017-12-07T23:29:35.606-06:002017-12-07T23:29:35.606-06:00Hi John,
I am into a revised draft on a film scrip...Hi John,<br />I am into a revised draft on a film script on Vincent & am interested in sending you an email & talking further. I'm interested in what you would have to say to a few things I'm finding out and believe.<br />unionislove1@gmail.com<br />Peace<br />UnionAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10161040826594407627noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-39888040073824936642017-09-20T18:56:13.242-05:002017-09-20T18:56:13.242-05:00Was van Gogh a left handed painter?
If he wasn...Was van Gogh a left handed painter?<br /><br />If he wasn't why would he produce so many self portraits looking like lefty. Portraits for people to see. <br /><br />And how many self portraits from other artists show right handed painters...are these people all left handed painters because they used a mirror.<br /><br />Maybe Gaugan painted van Gogh from memory because it does't look like himAntonyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06120249893271044084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-50213197479514843762016-02-14T16:25:00.507-06:002016-02-14T16:25:00.507-06:00The comment of KIKI - Van Gogh's left ear was ...The comment of KIKI - Van Gogh's left ear was cut off then Van Gogh being lefty couldn't do this. I am lefty and it would be all most impossible to cut my left ear off. The right ear would be possible. With all the hand gestures in Van Gogh's paintings such as the shovels and palette's-it all points to Van Gogh's was lefty and innocence of cutting his ear off.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03342768803847653730noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-23388661941972572012016-01-08T00:43:14.630-06:002016-01-08T00:43:14.630-06:00I was looking at his 5th painting of the Olive Gro...I was looking at his 5th painting of the Olive Grove tonight at the Minneapolis Institute of Art's Delacroix Influences and I'd have to conclude that he was a righty. When I stood to the very right of the painting, his painting marks are very deep and the painting and colors look very different in the way they catch the natural light on those edges. As I walked to the front and then to the very left the painted looked more muted. He was very heavy handed with that right.Tria1https://www.blogger.com/profile/14638353342744240126noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-87626607542768582042014-11-24T06:59:21.994-06:002014-11-24T06:59:21.994-06:00Van gogh is not a lefthanded. He looks like lefty ...Van gogh is not a lefthanded. He looks like lefty is because he painted himself by looking in the mirror. Please look at his painting 'self portrait with bandaged ear. You can see his injured ear was the right ear. But in fact, it was the left ear.Kiki Puspitahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00464763929866248374noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-55354512689637783302010-09-12T20:14:22.730-05:002010-09-12T20:14:22.730-05:00Thank you very much for your input, Stuart. Lots ...Thank you very much for your input, Stuart. Lots to think about. Btw, Van Gogh painted the Sunflower series before Gauguin arrived in Arles, as a way of decorating the Yellow House for Gauguin. The letters he wrote surrounding Gauguin's arrival paint a fascinating picture about his attitude toward, and idea of, the man. So, anyway, no you can't assume that Gauguin's painting of Vincent painting is in any way "straight." Almost nothing Gauguin did was straightforward, in my opinion. G. was a great artist but a liar and manipulator. There I go with my anti-Gauguin bias, not an unusual phenomenon among Van Gogh admirers. Your idea about Van Gogh possibly being ambidextrous seems perfectly possible, and psychologically it makes a kind of sense too. He did what he had to to get the work done; maybe that meant painting with both hands! (Not at the same time, of course.)John Vanderslicehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09312030415504335029noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8252865848064026807.post-63545127388546632112010-09-11T21:01:59.309-05:002010-09-11T21:01:59.309-05:00Everyone should consider at least reading Dr. Lubi...Everyone should consider at least reading Dr. Lubin's book; "A Stranger on the Earth. A brilliant piece of work which makes a psychological assessment of Van Gogh throughout his lifetime. A Stranger on the Earth is a good title for a book about a man (Vincent) who may have had a hard time being accepted by others;constantly fighting rejection which he experienced early in life; and who may have felt very different from others. Perhaps he transferred those feelings onto his canvases. For example, an early 1885 painting which he created has two left shoes resting side by side. Now two left shoes do not make a pair in the classical sense. They are both shoes- they are both for the same purpose- but if you look closely they do not really go together...and if you try the pair on...well one shoe will simply not feel quite right or even fit. So here is a good exaple of the "left" argument. Maybe Vincent was trying to tell us something----maybe that two of the same is not si good...maybe the real "fit" comes when there is a difference. <br />Now look at another painting- the one of two young men shoveling the earth. Both of those young men's right hands are gripping the lower shaft of the shovel and thus providing the scooping motion. Then look again... both of those same men's left hands are placed on the upper grip where the force comes from whilst shoveling. Note, this is not just one man using a lefthanded approach to shoveling-but rather both men.<br />So what's the point? Well the whole "left hand thing" need some further scholarly attention. I would prefer to go by what Van Gogh himself painted with his self portraits rather than the likes of Gauguin and that painting of Vincent painting sunflowers with his right hand hyper extended. By the way...the sunflower painting that Vincent is painting in Gauguin's work...was that particular sunflower painting made prior to Gauguin's arrival at the Yellow House???? Is the timing right for when Vincent painted the original painting to that of the time when Gauguin painted his work of Vincent. Finally, Russell's painting is a great work...but did Vincent sit for it or was it done from memory? Lots of questions which are hard to be 100 percent certain about unless written or painted by Vincent. Now please don't get too excited here...I am asking questions, not making any claim with certainty.<br />I think Mr. Hendriksen's observation about Vincent being left handed needs to be really explored as well as the whole- and often subtle- left hand/sided reference in several of his paintings....I tried the "mirror" argument that I have read about and it does not work in the instances where Vincent is using his right hand to hold the palette...Hendriksen is right....the coat(s) that Vincent are wearing button to the right side under, and into the left hand side...and whilst at the same time the palette is being held in right hand, and in more than one painting.<br />At the end of the day...we may discover that Vincent was neither right handed nor was he left handed....rather he was BOTH- and could use them interchangeably depending on the task. One thing is for certain- the "left" must be investigated further.<br />SSTributehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12407224699592716169noreply@blogger.com