Can you see the difference between sunflowers painted from life and those painted from memory?
This 18 June 2026 piece pauses on a small gallery in Philadelphia where two of Vincent van Gogh’s sunflower paintings hang side by side. Though the canvases are sisters, they bookend a period of profound psychological collapse. The focus moves past the thick brushstrokes to consider the gap between the man who painted from life and the man who later painted from memory. It asks whether anyone can truly return to a version of themselves that existed before a moment of total upheaval.
A comparative study of two Vincent van Gogh sunflower paintings exhibited together at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The analysis details the formal differences between the 1888 life-study and the 1889 repetition, situating both works within the artist’s tenure in Arles and his subsequent mental health crisis. It traces the shift from direct observation to reconstructed memory following the artist’s self-mutilation and his fallout with Paul Gauguin.
Read at source: Defector