
Head of a Prostitute
Vincent van Gogh·1885
Historical Context
Head of a Prostitute, painted in 1885 during Van Gogh's Nuenen period and now at the Van Gogh Museum, is an unusually direct social subject from his Dutch period — a portrait study of a woman from the social margins painted with the same sober attention he gave to his peasant subjects. Van Gogh drew and painted numerous women of the working and lower classes during this period, extending the social range of portrait subjects beyond the respectable. The dark tonal palette and the direct, unidealized observation of the subject reflect both the influence of Dutch realist tradition and Van Gogh's own commitment to social honesty — painting those who were ignored by conventional portrait practice.
Technical Analysis
The dark palette characteristic of Van Gogh's Nuenen work is fully present: the face emerges from deep tonal shadows in a manner that recalls Rembrandt's handling of candlelit interiors. The paint is applied with deliberate, careful handling that models the face through sober tonal observation. This is Van Gogh before his transformation in Paris — the color restrained, the technique systematic and dark. The face is rendered with uncompromising directness, the social status of the subject neither aestheticized nor condemned.
Look Closer
- ◆Van Gogh renders the woman's face with heavy expressive brushwork — thick paint for hardship.
- ◆The dark interior setting removes all distracting contextual detail from the sitter.
- ◆The figure's worn clothing is indicated with rough minimal brushwork.
- ◆The Potato Eaters period figure studies are among Van Gogh's most psychologically direct.




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