May 3, 2025

Walking in Trust

    Walking in Trust

    Vincent Van Gogh:
    The Painter on the Road to Tarascon


    A sun-lit summer day captured
    in colors and brush strokes
    we now know so well.

    The solitary figure
    walking down a road
    carrying paint box and canvas.

    Yet there is an emptiness
    a wanting to be accepted
    for all you have to give.

    The long shadow beneath you
    like a deeper darkness
    warning of things to come.

    And now your painting,
    as with your passing,
    is wrapped in mystery.

    Like a star in the night sky
    that fades with the light of day
    lost to time.

Dan Hardison


Calliope
Winter Edition 2024


    Vincent van Gogh
    The Painter on the Road to Tarascon
    oil on canvas, 1888
    (Kulturhistorisches Museum Magdeburg, Germany)

The only self-portrait that shows Vincent van Gogh’s entire body instead of only his head and torso, it was painted during his stay in Arles, France, about two years before his death. The painting was purchased by the Kaiser Friedrich Museum in Magdeburg, Germany in 1919 and a color photograph of the painting taken in the 1930s. During World War II, the painting was taken out of the museum’s storage and moved to a nearby salt mine to protect it. But the mine burst into flames when American troops entered on April 12, 1945. The cause of the fire was never known.

The Painter on the Road to Tarascon is believed to have been lost during the fire, but there are those who believe the painting may have been looted before the fire and still exists somewhere. The painting is one of only six Van Gogh paintings thought to have been lost or destroyed. The fate of the painting may remain a mystery, but we are fortunate to have the color photograph.