Richard Hughes Van Gogh Article)
Richard Hughes Van Gogh Article)
Richard Hughes Van Gogh Article)
By
Richard A. Hughes
M.B. Rich Professor of Religion
Lycoming College
700 College Place
Williamsport, PA 17701-5192
USA
The aim of this essay is to interpret selected aspects of the life and death of Vincent van
Gogh in light of a new biography. On October 18, 2011 two American scholars published a
detailed and comprehensive biography of the artist, consisting of nearly 900 pages with small
print and correlated with online footnotes (Naifeh and Smith 2011). This magisterial work will
surely become the definitive biography of the painter. The authors present new evidence that
refutes previous biographies, making them misleading or obsolete. For example, previous
studies presumed that van Gogh died by suicide, but that position can no longer be maintained
(cf. Blumer 2002; Meissner 1992; Nagera 1967).
My interpretation is based upon the work of Leopold Szondi, a Hungarian-Swiss
psychiatrist who established a monumental system of psychiatry called Schicksalsanalyse or the
analysis of destiny. As a psychiatric geneticist, Szondi discovered the familial unconscious
and synthesized it with psychopathology, ego psychology, and psychotherapy. He organized his
system in terms of the concept of destiny which he defined as the totality of all inherited
existential possibilities that one chooses and enacts (Szondi 1968: 21). The existential
possibilities emerge from the familial unconscious, and the individual selects them either
compulsively or relatively freely while acting out a pattern of behavior. The main choices are
those of marriage, vocation, friendship, and to a certain extent illness and mode of death. In
some cases compulsive choices may lead to a tragic fate.
In the following four sections I present a condensed biographical narrative based upon
the new van Gogh biography, citing only the page numbers, and at the end of the essay I interpret
aspects of the tragic destiny of the artist.
Anna never understood Vincent, her eldest son, because his eccentricities undermined her sense
of order in the world. Vincent never understood why she rejected him, and he never ceased
yearning for her approval (1112).
Anna planted a garden as a model of the cycles of nature, and it was in the garden that
Vincent learned his artistic symbolism, such as tree roots as the promise of life after death (27).
After dinner, the family would gather in the kitchen to read aloud to one another fairy tales,
poetry, literary classics, and the Bible. Vincent enjoyed, in particular, the stories of Hans
Christian Andersen, and throughout his adult life he continued the practice of extensive reading.
All the van Gogh children learned to draw, sketch, paint, and collage.
Anna imposed a strict discipline upon the children. Their behavior as ministers children
was governed by the Dutch holy Trinity of duty, decency, and solidity. This meant primarily
the duty of upholding the familys high social status. She taught them to dress well, associate
only with people in respectable circles, and to repress any unseemly emotions (33).
Vincents father was an aloof disciplinarian who erupted in righteous anger when his
authority was questioned (54). While Vincent emulated his father, he was never accepted by him
on his own terms. Vincent also admired his paternal male uncle, called Cent, who was a
wealthy, cosmopolitan art dealer. Although friendly and outgoing, Uncle Cent was physically
frail and vulnerable to terrible headaches (59).
As a young boy, Vincent was perceived as strange. He was reclusive, noisy,
quarrelsome, often displaying outbursts of anger aimed at his class-conscious and order-loving
mother (37). Since he felt alienated and rejected by her, he wanted to escape from home; so he
began his life-long habit of taking long solitary walks, wandering in nature, particularly at night
and during storms (39). Anna distrusted solitude and believed that country outings had to be
supervised. While walking in nature, Vincent would collect bugs, birds eggs, and flowers to
examine, categorize, and display with their proper Latin manes (43).
Vincents childhood companion was his younger brother Theo. Vincent was aloof, dark,
and suspicious; Theo outgoing, bright, and friendly. Despite their character differences,
however, they played together constantly, but they also argued with each other. Their father
viewed them in terms of the biblical story of Jacob and Esau (Gen. 25: 2328) in which Jacob
the second born son of Isaac acquired the blessing from his father, thus earning the hostility of
the first born Esau (42, 333).
In October 1864, when Vincent was 11 years old, his parents sent him to a boarding
school in Zevenbergen, where he was lonely, homesick, and in need of his father. He took
courses in art education, and what he learned came out many years later in his paintings (48).
Two years later his parents transferred him to another boarding school in Tilburg, but in March
1868 Vincent left school before finishing the term and walked seven hours back home to Zundert
because he wanted to be at home with his family.
work in his uncles office in The Hague. While in The Hague, Vincent became attracted to
Caroline Haanebeek, a pretty blonde of whom his parents approved. When she married someone
else, he reacted by declaring: If I cannot get a good woman he told Theo, I shall take a bad
one I would sooner be with a bad whore than be alone (78). In the fall of 1872 he began his
life-long practice of visiting prostitutes.
Vincents shyness and awkward behavior did not serve him well in his uncles firm. The
family feared that his misbehavior might discredit the family name; so his uncle decided to
transfer him to the London branch of the business which was wholesale only, and Vincent would
not be working with customers (81). In 1873 London was the largest city in the world, dirty,
chaotic, and distant from nature. Vincent was lonely and did not enjoy working in London. He
avoided socializing and continued his solitary activities of taking long walks, reading, and letter
writing (87). Socially inept but desiring human contact, he found his only companionship with
prostitutes (96). Conflicts with his family intensified. He wrote letters home less frequently, so
that his sister Anna said: He has withdrawn himself from the world and society .He pretends
not to know us . He is a stranger (99).
In 1875 Vincent was transferred to the company office in Paris, where he took an
apartment on the Montmartre but did not inform his family of his new address. The reason is
that he had found a new evangelical fervor (104). He read religious literature, specifically Ernest
Renans Life of Jesus and Thomas Kempis Imitation of Christ. He identified with Renans
portrait of Jesus as a provincial who shunned his family, loved nature, and journeyed in search of
himself. Always longing to go home, Vincent made an unauthorized trip home at Christmas in
1875, for which he was dismissed from the company. By April 1876 Vincent had returned to
London, where he secured employment as a tutor in a boarding school. He lived in a boarding
house near the church of the Baptist minister Charles Spurgeon, whose preaching attracted large
crowds to his services and who portrayed Jesus as a model of unconditional love.
Vincent was enthralled by Spurgeons oratory, and he decided to become a minister.
Having grown up in the Dutch Reformed Church which emphasized consolation rather than sin
and guilt, Vincent thought preaching had the purpose of consoling people and not judging them.
Dutch Reformed theology viewed God as watchful and caring (129). A Methodist minister
invited Vincent to be his assistant, and on October 29, 1876 he preached his first sermon, filled
with striking images of reconciliation and redemption. In the parish ministry he enjoyed
singing hymns and reading the New Testament story of the Prodigal Son. At Christmas 1876 he
returned home, hoping to be reconciled with his family, but they insisted that he should give up
his religious calling. They did not think he could make a living to support himself, so his father
and Uncle Cent secured a job for him as a bookkeeper and sales clerk for a bookseller in
Dordrecht. At age 24 he took the job out of duty, even though he still wanted to become a
minister. His father was impressed with his knowledge of art, and he pushed his son in the
direction of art business.
His job Dordrecht did not work out well, so he left the shop and traveled to Amsterdam to
begin formal study for the ministry. He wrote to Theo that, If I one day have the joy to become
a pastor and to acquit my task like our father ... I will thank God (149). In Amsterdam Vincent
lived with his paternal uncle Jan, a Rear Admiral in the Dutch navy and a heroic, disciplined
seaman. Vincent grew weary of his studies, particularly Greek, becoming restless, walking
frequently, and not relating to others. He became nostalgic for the past, especially England. His
letters were filled with images of darkness and self-reproach. His headaches became worse, and
for the first time he considered suicide: I breakfasted on a piece of dry bread and a glass of beer
that is what Dickens advises for those who are on the point of committing suicide, as being a
good way to keep them from their purpose, at least for a while (168).
Vincent always had the need to escape the world and construct an alternative reality
through art and religion (170). He imagined another world through images of the Prodigal Son,
the sower, and boats on stormy seas (285). The sower was one of his favorite life-long images,
and it came from his fathers preaching. He believed God could only be known through nature
and that artists were the true intermediaries. Religion and art have the power to console and
bring light into darkness. In his description of a twilight walk along the bank of the IJ River he
struggled to expressfor the first of many timesthe solace he found in the night sky. He began
with the shining moon and that deep silence. (176). Gods love is known through the stars,
and the starry night is the promise of redemption.
Vincent recognized that he could not complete his theological studies in Amsterdam.
With the intervention of his father he enrolled in a three-month trial program at an evangelical
school in Brussels, but he failed there as well. He traveled to the mining district of Belgium, to
the so-called black country, to serve a small country church. Between January and March of
1879 he visited a mine; and although he liked the miners, they rejected him as strange and
worthless. In July of 1879 the Evangelical Committee terminated Vincents ministry on the
grounds of poor preaching, but his parents believed the actual reason was his inability to comply
with the committees requests (202). Vincent fell into delusion and despair; and he yearned to
see his brother Theo, but Theo told him that he had brought their parents grief with shame and
disappointment (204). Overcome with melancholy, he considered suicide again when writing to
Theo: My life has gradually become less precious, much less important and more a matter of
indifference to me (207). Meanwhile, his father decided to commit him to an asylum.
In August 1880 Vincent announced that he was an artist (215). Theo began to support
Vincent financially, and he would continue the support for the remainder of Vincents life.
Vincent had become asocial, a person lacking social graces who believed that social interactions
were a choice between assaulting or being assaulted (223). Vincent remembered his fathers
intention to commit him to an asylum; so when going home for Christmas in 1881, Vincent
refused to attend holiday church services. Vincent released all his pent-up frustration in a fury
of righteous indignation and profane curses against his father (252). He could no longer contain
his anger. Consequently, his father ordered him out of his house and demanded that he never
return: Get out of my house the sooner the better, in half an hour rather than an hour.
Vincent never overcame his fathers rejection.
With bitterness and rage Vincent returned to The Hague, where he would live alone with
Theos financial support. Theo reprimanded him for mistreating their parents. Vincent would
have periodic fits of rage, followed by grudging efforts at reconciliation, followed by
meaningless vows of indifference . (261) These fits were aimed at everyone. Disagreements
quickly escalated into a frenzy of argument that knew neither reason nor restraint (264).
Vincent complained of fever and headaches, warning Theo that if he did not get his money he
would have a breakdown. He believed that he deserved to be supported financially on the
grounds of his hard work and noble purpose (271).
In the spring of 1882 he began a love affair with a pregnant prostitute Clasina Hoornik,
known as Sien. When she delivered her baby, they became his substitute family (293). Though
physically unattractive, he considered her an angel. He rented an apartment for his family and
wanted to marry Sien, but Theo tried to dissuade him from marriage. Two years later, however,
Vincent broke off the relationship with Sien.
Having become homeless and thinking of himself as belonging nowhere and being
nothing, he still hoped for a reunion with his family. He was getting physically weaker by eating
less food and drinking more alcohol. He took his walks at night so as to avoid meeting people.
He thought of life as an ash heap and spoke openly of regret (some things will never return)
and obliquely of suicide (327). His debts were mounting, and his creditors were coming after
him.
Reports of nervousness, feverishness, faintness, and dizziness continued throughout the
spring and summer, rising to a defensive crescendoas they always didin advance of his
brothers arrival (342). Theo came for a brief visit on August 17, 1883. They argued over
money, and Theo demanded that Vincent get a job. In Theos reprimand Vincent heard his
father speaking, so that with Theos departure at the train station Vincent thought that his
brother had become his father (346).
After a three-month trip to Drenthe, a town of poverty and bleakness where he painted
the peat fields, Vincent returned home for Christmas in 1883. He blamed his father for banishing
him two years earlier, and he charged that the banishment was the source of all his problems. He
stayed for two years, fighting with his father, proclaiming his atheism, and complaining of being
the black sheep in the family. In January 1884 Vincents 64-year old mother fell and broke her
hip, and for the next two months Vincent took care of her, thereby pleasing his parents.
In the fall and winter of 1884 a wealthy patron hired Vincent to paint, and he provided
paint supplies and even models. He was sexually intimate with one of his models. Vincent also
taught students how to paint. At a family dinner Vincent provoked an argument with his father,
and a dinner guest recorded that Vincent became so furious that he rose from his place with the
carving knife from the tray in his hand and threatened the bewildered old man (406).
Vincents on-going anger and abuse against his father aggravated the deteriorating health
of the elder van Gogh. The father struggled to manage Vincents increasingly unmanageable
behavior. At Christmas 1884 Vincents paternal cousin Hendrik, son of Admiral Jan, was
hospitalized for epileptic seizures. On March 27, 1885 Vincents father died of a stroke. In
subsequent years Vincent never mentioned his fathers death in his letters, and he never
described the funeral procession passing through the wheat fields. Vincents sister Anna
remained at home, did the housework, cared for her mother, and evicted Vincent. She told him
that he had killed their father, and he was now killing their mother (435). Vincent left home
never to return, and he would always fear a family conspiracy against him.
Vincent went to Paris to be with Theo and entered a drawing school, but he stayed only
three months. He had no success in selling or exhibiting his works, and he could not get any
models. Vincent wanted to work with Theo for the rest of their lives, but they continued to
quarrel over money, family, and art. Theos conflicts with Vincent led to his own deteriorating
health and by Christmas 1886 he lost weight and became weak. His joints stiffened to the point
of immobility, and his face swelled (529).
Theo acquired a new woman in his life, Johanna Bonger, and he proposed marriage to
her. At first she said no, but at a later time she accepted his proposal. With Theos intention to
marry Vincent suffered paralyzing nightmares and spoke of suicide (535). He realized that he
was dependent on Theo for his livelihood and that his only alternative to living with Theo was
suicide (535, 539).
In February 1888 Vincent left Paris unexpectedly and traveled to the town of Arles in
southern France. He resumed his life of exile and loneliness in a distant place, even though his
health continued to deteriorate with loss of appetite, fevers, and weakness. Theo sent him 150
Francs a month, and Vincent spent all the money. He rented a yellow house in Arles where he
wanted to establish an artistic brotherhood in which artists would work together helping one
another. With utopian visions of redemption Vincent entered the most productive phase of his
life, painting in a frenzy. In August 1888 he painted the Sower with Setting Sun in a vision
of Christ as a great artist who spread the light-filled redemption just as the striding figure in the
field spread the seeds of rebirth (612).
In Arles Vincent discovered the night sky and the stars which the lights of Paris had
obscured. He believed that the lovely evening stars express the care and love of God for us all
(648). At night the sky was darker in Arles than in Paris; so he decided to paint the starry night.
He produced the Starry Night over the Rhone in September 1888. He thought that if he could
capture the stars and infinite sky in paint, his loneliness might end (652).
In order to establish his artistic brotherhood Vincent invited Paul Gauguin to come to
Arles and work with him in the yellow house. Gauguin arrived in Arles on December 23, 1888,
but lacking privacy his work slowed; and he feared that Vincents volcanic personality might
erupt into a fatal and tragic attack against him, especially at night when Vincent roamed the
house menacingly (701).
With Christmas coming soon Vincent became haunted by the memories of his
disapproving father, by the fear that Theo would abandon him, since Jo Bonger had accepted his
second marriage proposal, and by the regret of having driven off Gauguin. Vincent felt the need
to punish himself. Gazing at his image in a mirror, he grabbed a straight razor and sliced off the
lower portion of his right ear lobe. Using towels to slow the bleeding, he dressed the wound and
ran out of the house into the rainy night, heading for a brothel. He left the packaged ear lobe for
Gaby, his favorite prostitute, with the message: Remember me (704).
On Christmas Eve Vincent fell gravely ill, and the police hospitalized him at Htel Dieu,
where he was placed in an isolation ward. Theo was notified, and he made a brief trip to the
hospital on Christmas. During the next five months, Vincent would be in and out of the hospital.
His inner world became one of darkness in which he had fits of rage, anxiety, unbearable
hallucinations, and eruptions of painful memories (708). He feared that Theos wedding would
separate them from each other. By December 30, however, his condition improved, and he was
discharged from the hospital.
In January 1889 Vincent was evicted from the yellow house for non-payment of rent.
The neighbors had petitioned for Vincents confinement, and for the second time the police
forcibly confined him to the Htel Dieu from February 25 until March 23, 1889. Theo was
planning his wedding and, at the same time complaining about his crushing debt, worsening
health, and possibility of dying. Theos wedding plans threatened Vincent with feelings of
abandonment and fears of mortality. Shortly before Theos wedding, Vincent decided to enter an
asylum, because he could no longer manage his own life.
Vincent chose the Roman Catholic asylum at Saint Rmy, and he arrived there on May 8,
1889. Felix Rey, the physician who had treated Vincent in Arles, sent to Thophile Peyron, the
head of the Saint Rmy asylum, his diagnosis of Vincent as that of non-convulsive epilepsy
which the French asylum doctors called masked epilepsy. It was characterized by hallucinations,
acts of self-mutilation, fits of rage, fury, excitability, and constant wondering (750). His attacks
were followed by loss of consciousness, twilight states, and possible acts of violence.
After reviewing Vincents family history, Peyron confirmed the diagnosis of epilepsy.
Vincents maternal grandfather Willem Carbentus died of a mental disease (751). His
maternal aunt had epilepsy throughout her life as an unmarried woman, and a maternal uncle
died by suicide. A paternal uncle suffered his first epileptic seizure at age 35 and then became
paralyzed before dying at an early age. Uncle Jan had undiagnosed seizures at 40, and his son
suffered some bad epileptic fits. Peyron wrote the following in Vincents chart: What
happened to this patient would be only the continuation of what has happened to several
members of his family (752).
Vincent felt liberated by the diagnosis, and he resumed painting. In June 1889 he
completed his masterpiece The Starry Night to express his vision of ultimate serenity with a
kaleidoscope of pulsating beacons, whirlpool of stars, radiant cloud, and a moon that shone as
brightly as any sun (762). From mid-July until the end of August 1889 Vincent had a series of
increasingly more frequent attacks, followed by fainting, vertigo, unconsciousness, as well as
images of the past and religious ideas (772773).
He recalled his mother teaching him in childhood that fate would always have its
revenge against excess or falsity (811). He feared fate falling upon Theo and his newborn baby
who was named Vincent. He thought of his father and wrote to his mother, pleading for
forgiveness. He believed in an ultimate forgiveness in the next world, so he painted heavenly
images in order to unite art, religion, and the family.
On May 16, 1890 Peyron pronounced Vincent cured, and on the next day Vincent
boarded a train to Paris to see Theo and his family. Four days later he left Paris on a train bound
for Auvers, a town north of Paris, complaining that Paris had such a bad effect on me that I
thought it wise for my heads sake to fly to the country (822). His life had become one of
resignation and of inexplicable suffering and irreversible fate (838839). He felt that his
family was moving away from him and that he was a burden on Theo, his wife, and their
newborn baby.
agitation caused by alcohol consumption and labeled it psychomotor epilepsy (Gaustaut 1956:
196198). Gastaut also indicated that epileptics have heightened emotionality, adhesiveness,
and hyposexuality. In spite of his emotional outbursts, Vincent remained attached to Theo
throughout his life, and he desired acceptance by his family as well as human contact when
alone. His heightened emotionality included a polarity of rage and religious feelings (Gastaut
1956: 223). This affective alternation exemplified the paroxysmal pattern of dual emotions in
epileptics (Szondi 1978: 5455). Gastaut also found that more than half of epileptics have an
absent or weakened sexual life, as with impotence or frigidity; and Vincent had these after his
stay in Arles (Gastaut 1956: 225).
Dietrich Blumer agreed with Gastaut and pointed out that between 1886 and 1888, while
in Paris, Vincent suffered paroxysms of sudden terror, epigastric sensations, lapses of
consciousness, tonic spasms of the hand, and stare followed by delusional amnesia (Blumer
2002: 520). Vincent was drinking absinthe, an alcoholic drink containing epileptogenic
properties and a favorite of artists at that time. When Vincent moved to Arles, he became
psychotic and fluctuated between dysphoria and euphoria, rage and religious feelings. These
phases were episodic and not sustained as in a mood disorder.
Psychomotor epilepsy exhibits psychic equivalents that occur independently of seizures.
Some of these are poriomania or restless wandering, attention to details, excessive writing,
dizziness, and a tendency toward fainting. Vincent had all of these at various times in his prepsychotic life, suggesting that Vincent was acting out epileptic symptoms long before Reys
diagnosis.
As a paroxysmal-epileptic personality, Vincents decisions were consistent with his drive
tendencies. Although he had sexual desire, Vincent neither married nor sustained a relationship
with any woman. Generally, paroxysmal persons select religious professions to socialize their
needs and tendencies (Szondi 1987: 274). Despite the opposition of his family, Vincent chose to
be a missionary, preacher, and evangelist, even though he did not turn those choices into
vocations, When he finally chose to be an artist, he continued to express religious themes and
feelings in his paintings. He painted, in effect, a natural theology to express the hope of ultimate
forgiveness in the next world (814). He resisted working in the world of art business, which his
family preferred and which would be consistent with a schizoform vocational selection (Szondi
1987: 285). Some of Vincents relatives chose schizoform artistic professions, such as Uncle
Cent, but his father and Uncle Jan held paroxysmal vocations of the ministry and the navy.
When Paul Gauguin visited Vincent in Arles in late 1888 but left unexpectedly a few
weeks later, Vincent sliced off his ear lobe. The self-mutilation would be interpreted
psychologically as a self-punishment for his homicidal intent against Gauguin. That Vincent
wanted to establish an artistic brotherhood and make Gauguin a brother implies a Cain
complex. Szondi found the Cain complex to be implicated in epilepsy in the sense that the
seizure is a substitute for the drive to kill the brother, followed by a phase of restitution or
making amends (Szondi 1963: 333). After his ear cutting, Vincent desired a reunion with
Gastaut (880).
With Theos marriage to Jo Bonger Vincent felt abandoned, but he welcomed the birth of
Theos baby boy. Theo wrote to Vincent, stating that his wife and baby were ill and complaining
about not having enough money. The complaint brought out Vincents guilt of having been a
financial burden upon his brother (842843). This guilt aggravated Vincents deepening sense
of resignation and fate.
11
When commenting on his case studies, Szondi would sometimes refer to them as
tragedies, but he never defined what he meant by tragedy. I propose to view tragedy as a
struggle of the hero against the overwhelming forces of fate (Exum 1992: 10). The hero rises up
in an assertion of will but is struck down by irreversible forces. Tragedy has appeared in
classical Greek drama and in the Old Testament, as in the suicide of King Saul (1 Sam. 31).
Thophile Peyrons assertion that Vincents epilepsy was a continuation of what
happened to his relatives reflected the idea in the tragic dramas of Aeschylus that fate unfolds
through the generations of the family and strikes down the hero at the end (de Romilly 1968:
6061, 63). Throughout his life Vincent was supported financially by Theo, and he justified that
support with the belief in the nobility of his artistic destiny. He tried to rise above ordinary
human life of work and love and shape an artistic vision of a transcendent other world. By
suffering the overpowering forces of his hereditary epilepsy his personal life deteriorated so
much that he could no longer live in this world. Whereas Greek tragedy involved external forces
of fate, Vincent endured them as internal.
The actual cause of Vincents death was a bullet wound to the abdomen. Since the shot
was unexpected and apparently accidental, it reflected the realm of chance which Euripides
portrayed as an unexpected event breaking into the heros life tragically (de Romilly 1968: 119,
130). The chance shooting converged with the fate of overpowering epileptic forces and fulfilled
Vincents tragic destiny. His statement at the endI wounded myselfwas not a literal
description of the pistol shot but a consent to his inevitable death. He welcomed death because
he could no longer live in this world.
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_____. 2002. The Illness of Vincent van Gogh. American Journal of Psychiatry 159:
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de Romilly, Jacqueline. 1968. Time in Greek Tragedy. Ithica: Cornell University Press.
Exum, J. Cheryl. 1992. Tragedy and Biblical Narrative. Cambridge: Cambridge
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