Vincent
van Gogh was born in Groot Zundert, The Netherlands on 30 March 1853. Van Gogh's
birth came one year to the day after his mother gave birth to a first, stillborn
child--also named Vincent. There has been much speculation about Vincent van Gogh
suffering later psychological trauma as a result of being a "replacement
child" and having a deceased brother with the same name and same birth date.
This theory remains unsubstantiated, however, and there is no actual historical
evidence to support it.
Van Gogh was the son of Theodorus van Gogh (1822-85),
a pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church, and Anna Cornelia Carbentus (1819-1907).
Unfortunately there is virtually no information about Vincent van Gogh's first
ten years. Van Gogh attended a boarding school in Zevenbergen for two years and
then went on to attend the King Willem II secondary school in Tilburg for two
more. At that time, in 1868, Van Gogh left his studies at the age of 15 and never
returned.
In 1869 Vincent van Gogh joined the firm Goupil & Cie., a
firm of art dealers in The Hague. The Van Gogh family had long been associated
with the art world--Vincent's uncles, Cornelis ("Uncle Cor") and Vincent
("Uncle Cent"), were art dealers. His younger brother, Theo, spent his
adult life working as an art dealer and, as a result, had a tremendous influence
on Vincent's later career as an artist.
Vincent was relatively successful
as an art dealer and stayed with Goupil & Cie. for seven more years. In 1873
he was transferred to the London branch of the company and quickly became enamoured
with the cultural climate of England. In late August, Vincent moved to 87 Hackford
Road and boarded with Ursula Loyer and her daughter Eugenie. Vincent is said to
have been romantically interested in Eugenie, but many early biographers mistakenly
misname Eugenie for her mother, Ursula. To add to the decades-long confusion over
the names, recent evidence suggests that Vincent wasn't in love with Eugenie at
all, but rather a Dutch woman named Caroline Haanebeek. The truth remains inconclusive.
Vincent van Gogh would remain in London for two more years. During that
time he visited the many art galleries and museums and became a great admirer
of British writers such as George Eliot and Charles Dickens. Van Gogh was also
a great admirer of the British engravers whose works illustrated such magazines
as The Graphic. These illustrations inspired and influenced Van Gogh in his later
life as an artist.
The relationship between Vincent and Goupil's became
more strained as the years passed and in May of 1875 he was transferred to the
Paris branch of the firm. It became clear as the year wore on that Vincent was
no longer happy dealing in paintings that had little appeal for him in terms of
his own personal tastes. Vincent left Goupil's in late March, 1876 and decided
to return to England where his two years there had been, for the most part, very
happy and rewarding.
In April Vincent van Gogh began teaching at Rev. William
P. Stokes' school in Ramsgate. He was responsible for 24 boys between the ages
of 10 and 14. His letters suggest that Vincent enjoyed teaching. After that he
began teaching at another school for boys, this one lead by Rev. T. Slade Jones
in Isleworth. In his spare time Van Gogh continued to visit galleries and admire
the many great works of art he found there. He also devoted himself to his Bible
study--spending many hours reading and rereading the Gospel. The summer of 1876
was truly a time of religious transformation for Vincent van Gogh. Although raised
in a religious family, it wasn't until this time that he seriously began to consider
devoting his life to the Church.
As a means of making a transition from
teacher to clergyman, Vincent requested that Rev. Jones give him more responsibilities
specific to the clergy. Jones agreed and Vincent began to speak at prayer meetings
held within the parish of Turnham Green. These talks served as a means of preparing
Vincent for the task which he had long anticipated: his first Sunday sermon. Although
Vincent was enthusiastic about his prospects as a minister, his sermons were somewhat
lackluster and lifeless. Like his father, Vincent had a passion for preaching,
but lacked a gripping and passionate delivery.
Undeterred, Vincent van
Gogh chose to remain in The Netherlands after visiting his family over Christmas.
After working briefly in a bookshop in Dordrecht in early 1877, Vincent left for
Amsterdam on 9 May to prepare himself for the admission examination to the university
where he was to study theology. Vincent received lessons in Greek, Latin and mathematics,
but his lack of proficiency ultimately compelled him to abandon his studies after
fifteen months. Vincent later described this period as "the worst time of
my life". In November Vincent failed to qualify for the mission school in
Laeken after a three month trial period. Never one to be swayed by adversity,
Vincent van Gogh eventually made arrangements with the Church to begin a trial
period preaching in one of the most inhospitable and impoverished regions in western
Europe: the coal mining district of The Borinage, Belgium.
In January,
1879 Vincent began his duties preaching to the coal miners and their families
in the mining village of Wasmes. Vincent felt a strong emotional attachment to
the miners. He sympathized with their dreadful working conditions and did his
best, as their spiritual leader, to ease the burden of their lives. Unfortunately,
this altruistic desire would reach somewhat fanatical proportions when Vincent
began to give away most of his food and clothing to the poverty-stricken people
under his care. Despite Vincent's noble intentions, representatives of the Church
strongly disapproved of Van Gogh's asceticism and dismissed him from his post
in July. Refusing to leave the area, Van Gogh moved to an adjacent village, Cuesmes,
and remained there in abject poverty. For the next year Vincent struggled to live
from day to day and, though not able to help the village people in any official
capacity as a clergyman, he nevertheless chose to remain a member of their community.
One day Vincent felt compelled to visit the home of Jules Breton, a French painter
he greatly admired, so with only ten francs in his pocket he walked the entire
70 kilometers to Courrières, France, to see Breton. Upon arriving, however,
Vincent was too timid to knock and returned to Cuesmes utterly discouraged.
It
was then that Vincent began to draw the miners and their families, chronicling
their harsh conditions. It was during this pivotal time that Vincent van Gogh
chose his next and final career: as an artist.