How to Read “The Starry Night” by Vincent van Gogh

<p>We often experience the night sky as countless pinpricks of light set against an impossibly dark and silent black &mdash; such is the way a starry night appears to the naked eye.</p> <p>Yet Vincent van Gogh painted something quite different: a spiralling light-filled figment, replete with texture, waves and ripples.</p> <p><em>The Starry Night&nbsp;</em>has become one of Van Gogh&rsquo;s most recognisable and celebrated paintings. But why did he paint the night sky in this way?</p> <p>And what was his surprising view of his own painting?</p> <h1>A Dream of an Idea</h1> <p>The idea of painting the night sky had been simmering in Van Gogh&rsquo;s mind since at least the summer of 1888 when he wrote excitedly to his friend and fellow painter Emile Bernard: &ldquo;But when will I do the starry sky, then, the painting that&rsquo;s always on my mind? Alas, alas &hellip; the most beautiful paintings are those one dreams of while smoking a pipe in one&rsquo;s bed, but which one doesn&rsquo;t make.&rdquo;</p> <p><a href="https://christopherpjones.medium.com/the-surprising-belief-van-gogh-had-about-his-most-famous-painting-97c27faad1fd"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>
Tags: Starry Night