
Pair of Shoes, A
Vincent van Gogh·1887
Historical Context
Van Gogh's study of a pair of shoes from 1887, now in the Baltimore Museum of Art, belongs to a celebrated series of shoe still lifes that the philosopher Martin Heidegger famously analyzed in his essay 'The Origin of the Work of Art.' Heidegger saw in the boots a revelation of peasant world, of earthy labor, though scholars have subsequently debated whether these were Van Gogh's own boots rather than peasant boots. Whatever their origin, the shoes are treated with remarkable seriousness — worn, used, bearing the marks of a life lived within them — as objects that carry the weight of human experience. The Baltimore Museum holds this as one of its most discussed Van Gogh works.
Technical Analysis
The pair of shoes is arranged on a flat surface, their worn, deformed shapes rendered with close observation of every crease, lace-hole, and mark of use. Van Gogh's dark palette is appropriate to worn leather, the shoes modeled with careful tonal attention. The paint surface has the material presence that makes the shoes feel genuinely worn.
Look Closer
- ◆The shoes are depicted without feet — objects carrying the trace of use without a wearer.
- ◆One sole is turned upward, exposing its worn leather bottom from an angle revealing its life.
- ◆The shoelaces are painted in thin, rapid dark strokes describing their tangled state precisely.
- ◆Van Gogh's dark paint ground shows between brushstrokes — the shoes exist in more shadow than light.




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