Sorrow (Van Gogh)

Sorrow
Artist Vincent van Gogh
Year 1882 (1882)
Catalogue F929a
Type Drawing
Medium Pencil, pen and ink on paper
Subject Nude
Dimensions 44.5 cm × 27.0 cm (17.5 in × 10.6 in)
Condition Good
Location The New Art Gallery Walsall, England
Accession 1973.128.GR

Sorrow is a drawing by Vincent van Gogh produced in 1882. The work was created two years after Van Gogh had decided to become an artist. It depicts a 32-year-old pregnant woman, Clasina Maria Hoornik, familiarly known as Sien. Sorrow is widely acknowledged as a masterwork of draftsmanship, the culmination of a long and sometimes uncertain apprenticeship by Van Gogh in learning his craft.[1] The drawing is part of the Garman Ryan Collection held at The New Art Gallery Walsall.[2] Previously, it was in the private collection of artist Sally Ryan, who had the work hung in her permanent suite at the Dorchester Hotel in London.[3] The drawing is one of a series using Sien Hoornik as model. It is mentioned in a number of letters by Van Gogh, and he appears to have thought highly of it, considering it an important work and describing the drawing as "the best figure I've drawn".[4] In a letter from July 1882 Van Gogh states; I want to make drawings that touch some people. Sorrow is a small beginning [...] there is at least something directly from my own heart.[5] The piece is numbered as F929a in the catalogue raisonné by Jacob Baart de la Faille.

Relationship with Sien

Van Gogh is reported to have encountered Sien Hoornik wandering the streets of The Hague with her five-year-old daughter Maria Wilhelmina in January 1882. She was destitute and pregnant, with addictions to alcohol and tobacco and reportedly working as a prostitute. Van Gogh cared for her for around a year between 1882 and 1883, reportedly out of pity and a sense of duty. From Hoornik's perspective their relationship is not reported to have been anything more than a convenient solution to a difficult situation.[6] Van Gogh was, however, reported at one stage to have been planning to marry her.[7] He provided shelter and in return Hoornik modelled for him.[8]

In July 1882 Hoornik gave birth to a son, Willem, at the Maternity Hospital in Leiden. After the birth she and Van Gogh moved into an apartment with a studio. This was reportedly a happy period for Van Gogh but by early 1883 Hoornik had started drinking again and returned to prostitution. The shared apartment became squalid, and the relationship between them deteriorated. Van Gogh found it increasingly difficult to support Hoornik and her children, in September 1883 they parted and Van Gogh left to further his career. In 1904 Clasina Maria Hoornik committed suicide by drowning herself in the Schelde River.[9]

Symbolism

Sorrow was probably produced in the spring of 1882, between the encounter with Hoornik in January and the birth of her son in July. The drawing was mentioned in a letter to Van Gogh's brother Theo dated 10 April 1882. This dating is supported by the depiction of spring flowers in the foreground. Although the overall feel of the image has been described as bleak, the presence of spring flowers hints at the possibility of redemption.[10] Van Gogh depicts Sien Hoornik as a woman scarred by life, and saw parallels to his own drawings of age-old trees ravaged by nature, such as The Roots in Sandy Ground (Les racines) 1882. Van Gogh writes:[11]

I wanted to express something of life's struggle, both in that white slender female figure and in those gnarled black roots with their knots.

The drawing is inscribed with the phrase "Comment se fait-il qu'il y ait sur la terre une femme seule, délaissée?", which translates to "How can there be on earth a woman alone, abandoned?", a quotation from contemporary social historian Jules Michelet's book La Femme.[12] The phrase provides a key to the themes of some of Van Gogh's early works, and his belief in poverty being the root cause of things such as prostitution.[10]

Alternative versions

The lost version (F929)
A print (F 1655, JH 259)

There were reportedly four versions of Sorrow from around early to mid April 1882, the original drawing and two other versions which were made when Van Gogh realised the original had been pressed through onto two sheets of underlying paper, which he was able to work up afterwards. Ten days after production of the original he drew another larger version of the same subject, now only two versions remain. The larger version is mentioned by Van Gogh in a letter to Theo dated 1 May 1882.[13] He writes:

I've now finished two larger drawings. First of all Sorrow, but in a larger format, the figure alone without surroundings. But the pose has been altered somewhat, the hair doesn't hang down the back but to the front, part of it in a plait. This brings the shoulder, the neck, and back into view. And the figure has been drawn with more care.

The location of this alternative version is currently unknown, and it may no longer exist.

Another of the drawings mentioned as being sent to his brother in a letter on 10 April 1882 is considered lost.[4]

Print impressions of versions of Sorrow are in the collection of the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (which has two copies) and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.[14][15][16] The latter's copy was printed by J. Smulders & Cie. of The Hague.[15]

References

  1. Hughes, Robert (27 October 2005). "The genius of Crazy Vinnie". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  2. Accession number 1973.128.GR
  3. Digger, Jo (2009). Extraordinary People: Portraits in the Garman Ryan Collection. The New Art Gallery Walsall. p. 56. ISBN 0 946652 93 7.
  4. 1 2 Jansen, Leo (2009). Vincent van Gogh - The Letters: The complete illustrated and annotated edition - Volume 2: The Hague 1881-1883. London: Thames & Hudson. p. 52. ISBN 978 0 500 23865 3.
  5. Roskill, Mark (1963). The Letters of Van Gogh. Glasgow: Fontana. p. 155.
  6. Digger, Jo (2009). Extraordinary People: Portraits in the Garman Ryan Collection. The New Art Gallery Walsall. p. 32. ISBN 0 946652 93 7.
  7. Bronkhorst, Hans (1990). Vincent van Gogh. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 15. ISBN 0 297 83108 9.
  8. "Letter 227: To Theo van Gogh. The Hague, on or about Tuesday, 16 May 1882". Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. Van Gogh Museum.
  9. Zemel, C (1997). Van Gogh's Progress: Utopia, Modernity, and Late-Nineteenth-Century Art. Berkeley: University of California Press, page 52. ISBN 0-520-08849-2.
  10. 1 2 McGregor, Sheila (1999). A Shared Vision: The Garman Ryan Collection at The New Art Gallery Walsall. London: Merrell Holberton. p. 58. ISBN 1 85894 086 9.
  11. Stolwijk, Chris (2012). Van Gogh: New Findings. Amsterdam: WBooks. p. 66. ISBN 978 90 400 0714 9.
  12. Michelet, Jules (1860). Woman (La femme). Rudd & Carleton. p. 32. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  13. Jansen, Leo (2009). Vincent van Gogh - The Letters: The complete illustrated and annotated edition - Volume 2: The Hague 1881-1883. London: Thames & Hudson. p. 61. ISBN 978 0 500 23865 3.
  14. Accession: 332.1951
  15. 1 2 "Vincent van Gogh. Sorrow. November 1882". MoMA. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  16. "Vincent van Gogh: The Lithographs ("Sorrow")". Van Gogh Gallery. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
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