Van Gogh raffolait des estampes japonaises. Dans ses tableaux leur influence est évidente. À condition que tu saches quelque chose.
masque de femme japonaise souriante et grasse ? I1 est bien surprenant second half of the Paris period. Van Gogh painted Tan- guy with Japanese prints in
http://cafe-geo.net/wp-content/uploads/CR-Hiroshige-et-Van-Gogh.pdf
Van Gogh may well have read the 1 May 1886 issue of Paris Illustré sub-titled Le Japon
1 avr. 2015 Les dessins de Van Gogh : influences et innovations » offre un large ... L'artiste contemporaine japonaise Tabaimo dont nous présentons ...
2 See J.B. de la Faille The works of Vincent van Gogh: his paintings sous une apparence de gaiete japonaise et la bonhomie du Tartarin.").
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73394/pdf
I. Comprendre l'influence japonaise. Estampe japonaise « Courtisane ». « Iris » Estampe de Hokusai. « Iris » Vincent van Gogh. Vincent Van Gogh.
Van Gogh a été influencé par l'art japonais. À Paris il côtoie les impressionnistes qui ad- mirent le japonisme. Les estampes japonaises et les ukiyoe
http://www.marc-restellini.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/DP-Van-Gogh-Hiroshige-FR-BD.pdf
Van Gogh Collector of “Japan” Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) was one of the many European and American art-ists working in the context of Japonisme—the movement that beginning in the early 1870s and running its course by around 1900 encouraged the appreciation and systematic study of Japanese art These artists were influenced some of
Prone to mythologizing Japanese culture, van Gogh idealized Japanese life and artists. He imagined them working as monks in a communal setting, hoping to recreate this atmosphere in the Yellow House, where he briefly lived with Paul Gauguin in 1888.
During his Paris years and the early months at Arles, Van Gogh’s indebtedness to Japonisme included color symbolism, adoption of the dot and line technique, and the introduction of a high horizon line. Compare Undergrowth, 1887 (see Figure 11) and Undergrowth with Ivy, 1889 (see Figure 12).
Japanese Prints: The Collection of Vincent van Gogh documents the extent to which the famed Dutch artist looked to his collection of some 660 Japanese works for inspiration.
Degas adopted this approach to figurative poses to create a greater sense of spontaneity and instantaneity, ideas that were central to his Impressionist style. When van Gogh arrived in Paris, the self-taught artist set to studying both Impressionist painting and Japanese prints.