
Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat
Vincent van Gogh·1887
Historical Context
Painted in Paris in 1887, this self-portrait with straw hat belongs to Van Gogh's intense period of self-examination and stylistic experimentation after his encounter with Impressionism. He painted over twenty self-portraits in Paris between 1886 and 1888, using himself as the most available and economical model while also interrogating his own identity as an artist. The straw hat — a peasant accessory — connects to his idealized image of the artist as laborer. The Metropolitan Museum canvas shows his adoption of the broken, comma-like brushstrokes of Neo-Impressionism, learned from Seurat and Signac, applied with a characteristic personal intensity.
Technical Analysis
The face and background are constructed from short, parallel strokes of varied color — blues, greens, and oranges placed in near-complementary juxtaposition for maximum vibrancy. The straw hat is rendered in warm yellows and ochres. Van Gogh's technique here is more systematically divisionist than in his later fluid Arles style.
Look Closer
- ◆The straw hat casts a shadow across the upper forehead, yet Van Gogh illuminates the eyes.
- ◆The background is divided into complementary warm and cool zones — a compositional colour device.
- ◆The brushwork behind the hat brim is visibly different in direction from that used on the face.
- ◆Van Gogh's beard and mustache are rendered in varied auburn and red tones rather than uniform brown.




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