Van Gogh--A Pair of Shoes
A Pair of Shoes, 1885


This painting of a pair of down-at-hill shoes prompts speculation on a variety of psychological questions. They have been seen as symbolizing Van Gogh's difficult passage through life. A fellow student in Paris reported that Vincent bought these workman's boots at a flea market, intending to use them in a still life. Finding them still a little too smart, however, he wore them on a long and rainy walk. Only then were they fit to be painted. Van Gogh made a number of still lives with old shoes. To him, as to several of his contemporaries, they may hvae been symbolic of the hard yet picturesque life of the laborer.

Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam Oil on Canvas, 37.5 x 45 cm

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Source: www.artmuseum.net
Jillian Weaver
Last updated: Sun., March 21, 1999