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Starry Night - van Gogh Triangle Sticker
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Triangle Stickers
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Starry Night - van Gogh Triangle Sticker
From the miner's lamp of Nuenen to the one he placed on his window-sill following the scene with Gauguin; from the evening star he noted in 1875 in Corot Olive Orchard to the letter he wrote to his brother in August 1888, in which he said: "Some day or other you will see a picture of the little house itself bathed in sunlight, or else with the window lighted and a starry sky above"--throughout these years Van Gogh was obsessed by the symbolism of luminous objects and of colour. The lamp was a symbol of calm and security. The star symbolised faith, and gaslight, human realities. Deep ultramarine blue was infinity, while red and green expressed "those terrible things, men's passions." Prior to August 1888, he revealed these ideas only in his letters and made no real attempt to apply them in painting. There is no trace of them in the works of Holland and Paris, nor in the canvases he produced at Arles between February and August 1888 ( Orchard in Bloom, Le Pont de l' Anglois, Boats at Saintes-Maries, and many others), which are impressionist, "Japanese," decorative rather than expressionist and, in short, similar to those he had been painting in Paris. Two letters dated August and September 1888 throw a special light on Van Gogh's intentions. In August, he asserted his determination to become an "arbitrary colourist" so that he might paint the portrait of an artist friend "who dreams great dreams." In his picture he wished to express "his appreciation and love for him"; the fair head set against a background of rich blue would "produce a mysterious effect like a star in the azure depths of the sky." In the second of these letters, he spoke of his house at Arles, the lighted window and the starry sky above: a strange premonition of the scene with Gauguin. And yet Gauguin was not a mere harbinger of catastrophe, or even an innocent symbol of it. On the contrary, he came with a precious gift which was not to be lost on Van Gogh: that virile feeling for plastic values, that keen sense of construction in terms of colour which imparted a last degree of strength and solidity to the great symbolic pictures of Van Gogh's closing cycle of works.
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4.8 out of 5 stars rating26.7K Total Reviews
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2 out of 5 stars rating
By Narell s.10 December 2018 • Verified Purchase
Zazzle Reviewer Program
TOO small for the price. Dull and I had trouble find a place to get hem off the sheet.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By J.23 August 2015 • Verified Purchase
Zazzle Reviewer Program
The stickers are small but the color and glossy finish was excellent. I had to rotate the picture until it was upside down so that the picture could fit in the triangle, so don't let the upside down picture discourage you from customizing your own stickers. The colors are nothing but black and white which is not a problem at tall. The glossy finish just made the stickers even better. Overall, the quality of the stickers are great!
from zazzle.com (US)
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Sandy P.7 September 2021 • Verified Purchase
Zazzle Reviewer Program
I ordered the wrong size but loved them so much I used them to seal my invitation envelopes! Printing was perfect!
from zazzle.com (US)
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Product ID: 217976578553382162
Added on 5/7/13, 9:14 am
Rating: G
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