Vincent Van Gogh & Frida Kahlo
Contrasting Art Styles. The Biography Collection
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Narrated by:
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Jerry Beebe
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Alana Marie Cheuvront
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By:
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The History Hour
About this listen
Unlike most artists, Van Gogh developed very slowly, beginning with work as an art dealer that exposed him to many great works. He undertook this work for several years, after which he spent time as a missionary for the Dutch Reformed Church. After that, he drifted for several years before re-turning home to his parents’ house, where he took up painting, largely self-taught with books on anatomy and painting. His great works all date from the later years of his life.
Inside you’ll hear about:
- Early life
- The first four years of creativity
- Stylistic developments and influences
- Paris
- Arles
- Van Gogh and Gauguin
- Hospitalization
- Life in an asylum
- Van Gogh’s death
- And much more!
Totally neglected in his life, he suffered from psychosis for much of his life, and was treated for depression, unsuccessfully. He died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on July 29th, 1890. Only after his death, thanks to the efforts of his brother, Theo, he achieved recognition as a great artist.
Frida Kahlo was ahead of her time. She was bisexual and would have fit in perfectly in the time we live in now. Her disabilities would be acceptable in our society of today and her husband, Diego would probably be run out of town by the Real Housewives of “Cheaters.” Frida came with a lot of baggage in her life starting when she was only six years old and even more baggage piled on when she was in high school. Her suffering was more than anyone can imagine but she kept her head held high and forged her way forward.
Inside you’ll hear about:
- Frida’s birth and family
- Frida and Diego begin their life together
- Diego’s first fight with penile cancer
- Frida’s lovers
- Frida was rotten to the core
- A lifetime of Frida’s creations
- A medical doctor’s perspective on Frida
And much more! If Frida had not had a unibrow, waxed her upper lip, and shaved under her arms, she may have appeared more feminine than she did, and it may have given her more self-confidence. She never gave herself a chance because she felt it was her job to be the boy in the family.
©2019 The History Hour (P)2019 The History Hour