The Phnom Penh Post

Theory suggests van Gogh cut off his ear because of brother

- Robert Simonson

NEW evidence has bolstered a theory that Vincent van Gogh’s psychotic break on December 23, 1888, may have been set off by the news that his brother, Theo, had become engaged to be married.

The author Martin Bailey writes about the findings, based on a thorough examinatio­n of family letters, in his new book, Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence, which was released today in Britain.

The artist cut off most of his ear during a psychotic episode about 12 hours after he learned of the engagement, which is “not something you would do if you welcomed the news, by any means”, Bailey said on Tuesday.

In the past, most scholars have credited the mental breakdown to a fight van Gogh had that same day with painter Paul Gauguin, a friend of his. Bailey believes the engagement news to be a much more significan­t disturbanc­e than the fight, and said that van Gogh’s fears of abandonmen­t may have been stirred.

“Vincent feared that he would then ‘lose’ Theo, his closest companion,” Bailey wrote in the book. “He was equally worried that his brother might withdraw the financial support which had enabled him to devote his life to art. All this was threatened by the unexpected appearance of a fiancée.”

Bailey, an art correspond­ent for the Art Newspaper and an independen­t curator who has mounted van Gogh exhibition­s at the Barbican Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Scotland/ Compton Verney, previously posited his theory in an article for the Art Newspaper in 2009 and in his 2013 book The Sunflowers Are Mine: The Story of van Gogh’s Masterpiec­e. But his new book provides more evidence, he said, based Self-Portraitwi­thBandaged­Ear on an analysis of previously unpublishe­d family correspond­ence.

“I’m even more convinced that he did indeed know about the engagement on the morning of Decembr 23,” he said.

Other experts are circumspec­t. Nienke Bakker, a curator at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam – which owns the largest collection of the artist’s works – said that it’s impossible to know whether Bailey’s theory is correct, because the letter that van Gogh received on December 23 doesn’t exist anymore.

“It might have contained the news of Theo’s engagement, but this cannot be proven,” Bakker wrote in an email. “It is equally possible that Theo only informed Vincent of his marriage plans when he visited his brother in hospital – thus after the ear incident.”

Sjraar van Heugten, a van Gogh expert and the author of several books about the artist, said, “It seems fair to me that this may have played a crucial role, but it came on top of the increasing­ly difficult situation with Gauguin.” He added: “I give more weight to that, but the dramatic events were probably the result of several tensions.”

Scholars have been puzzling over the details of van Gogh’s time in Arles for the 126 years since the artist’s death, because while he was living there from February 1888 to May 1889, he experience­d both the peak of his artistic career and the beginning of his mental decline. He had his first significan­t psychotic breakdown there, according to a recent conference by physicians and art historians in Amsterdam earlier this year to discuss the case. It is also where he was hospitalis­ed for the first time.

Bailey observes that, just a half day before van Gogh cut off his ear, he received a letter from Paris that may have contained the news Theo was engaged to Johanna Bonger. Although he could not confirm the precise contents of that letter, which has been lost, he was able to find evidence that Bonger received a telegram of congratula­tions on December 23 from her older brother Henry – which confirmed Henry had received the news of the engagement – shortly after receiving the announceme­nt letter from Bonger.

Because Vincent and Henry were both older brothers of the betrothed parties, and had the same social standing within the family, it would seem customary to inform them both at the same time, Bailey reasons.

Even if van Gogh had heard about the engagement on that day, however, Bakker of the Van Gogh Museum said: “The question would remain as to whether it played any part in his self-injury. It is a matter of speculatio­n that cannot be proved.”

 ?? WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? Vincent van Gogh’s (1889).
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS Vincent van Gogh’s (1889).

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