Friday 21 March 2014

Flippin' Classrooms! Grade 12 Task

Hello Grade 12 students!  Here is your task:

Watch the following documentary on Vincent Van Gogh.  On Monday, we will be discussing the video, the artist, and his work.  I will present you with a series of questions that were generated by your peers that have watched this video previously.  I present the following question to you for your consideration:
If you could travel back in time and could provide Vincent with modern medicine that could alleviate the crippling depression and anxiety that drove him to create his masterpieces, would you?



As you watch this video, I would like you to give serious thought to how devastating mental illness can be.

On Friday, we discussed Van Gogh's "Starry Night", seen below:


The painting was done from memory during the day.  It is somewhat whimsical, showing his view from the sanatorium he committed himself to in May of 1889.  Please consider the following quote from Van Gogh:
"The imagination is certainly a faculty that we must develop and it alone can bring us to a more exulting and consoling nature.  The star-spangled sky, for instance, is a thing that i would like to do.  But how can I manage, unless I make my mind up to work from imagination?"

In the scene is the village of Saint Rémy.  The Alpilles rise to the right.  The cypress tree and hills were not really in the same view; Vincent added those from nearby scenes.  The same tree (or at least very similar tree) can be seen in "Wheatfield with Cypresses":


A debate exists as to whether or not Van Gogh painted this in a literal or literary way:

1) Literal - he either painted it as he saw it, or as a hallucinatory genius.  Astronomers agree that given that it was painted in June, the largest star is the morning star but cannot agree whether or not the constellations shown are Cygnus or Aries.

2) Literary - some believe that he may have drawn his inspiration for this painting from the work of Walk Whitman or Victor Hugo, or perhaps from the Bible (Christ in Gethsemane,  Joseph's dream in Genesis, or even Revelations).  

Whatever the inspiration, it is one of the most recognizable pieces in art history!


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