The Sunflowers of Van Gogh which Gauguin Did Not Like
位置: National Gallery
地址: Trafalgar Square, Charing Cross, London WC2N 5DN
“The sunflower is mine!” Vincent van Gogh once said, seeing in that flower the ephemeral nature of human actions or, perhaps, quite simply, an anthem to the vitality of nature. Certainly, no other artist has ever been so closely associated with a specific flower of any type. In February of 1888, Vincent van Gogh settled in Arles, in the South of France. Happy about his new life in the ancient village and of his “yellow house”, Vincent sought to convince his friend Gauguin to join him. Vincent’s dream was to establish a tiny artists’ community in Arles, of which he and his friend would act as mentors. It was during the summer, as he awaited Gauguin’s arrival, that he began to paint his celebrated series of Sunflowers in a vase. To decorate his guest-room and make a lasting impression on his friend, Vincent van Gogh thought to do a dozen paintings, including the Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers that, today, is part of the Collection of the National Gallery of London. Gauguin showed up the following autumn, but unlike Van Gogh, he found nothing interesting about Arles and he found living with Vincent impossible. The friendship between the two ended abruptly in short time and their paths diverged thereafter. Van Gogh had a nervous breakdown, while Gauguin decided to leave France and move to Tahiti in Polynesia, seeking to alter his very existence.
At the Courtauld Gallery in London, the first major European exhibition devoted to Salman Toor. A figurative practice that explores intimacy, desire and vulnerability in contemporary urban life. Everyday scenes become spaces of recognition and belonging.
At the National Portrait Gallery in London, Tim Walker reconsiders his fairy-tale imagery through the lens of a real community. Portraits, staging and narrative create a universe where identity and affection become a collective story. An exhibition that moves portraiture towards a space that is both poetic and political.
The National Gallery presents a major retrospective exploring Renoir’s many visions of love. More than fifty works, including Bal au Moulin de la Galette, will come to London in Autumn 2026. The exhibition traces fin-de-siècle Paris through the artist’s vivid social and emotional landscapes.
The National Gallery presents an exhibition on Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller’s landscapes. The show highlights his direct observation of nature and a rigorous approach to composition. Light, seasons and structure define a modern vision of the landscape.