Vincent van Gogh

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 01:00, 8 October 2012 by KrustyFrank27 (talk | contribs) (Adding categories)

Vincent van Gogh was a famous Dutch painter of the late 19th century. Though born in Holland, he lived most of his life in France and was particularly associated with Provence. He lived in the Parisian neighbourhood of Montmartre for a period of time. Van Gogh suffered from intense mental illness, including bipolar disorder and bouts of anxiety. He died at the age of thirty-seven from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Although largely unknown at the time of his death, he went on to be regarded as one of the greatest painters of all time.

Biography

Early life

Vincent van Gogh was sent to France by his brother Theo to gain experience by possibly meeting other painters of his time. He eventually ended up alone. Hegained a reputation among the locals of Auvers-sur-Oise as a madman and drunkard. He tried to sell his paintings to buy drink without success.

Meeting the Doctor

File:Alien art.jpg
Krafayis in the church window from van Gogh's original painting. (TV: Vincent and the Doctor)

Van Gogh met the Eleventh Doctor and Amy Pond in 1890. He commented on Amy's beauty and accepted her offer to share a bottle of wine. They were interrupted by locals. A young girl had been found dead. When the Doctor, van Gogh and Amy tried to help her, one of the villagers blamed Vincent for the death and drove him away by throwing rocks. Vincent allowed the Doctor and Amy to stay in his home, which was cluttered with paintings he thought worthless. Later, when Amy was attacked by the Krafayis, a seemingly invisible creature, Vincent could see it, allowing him to save Amy and the Doctor.

With some persuasion from Amy and the Doctor, Vincent agreed to help them stop the Krafayis from killing again. However, before they left for the church, Vincent broke down, weeping that like everyone else, Amy and the Doctor would leave and he would be forgotten and alone. When the Doctor tried to empathise, Vincent grew angry and ordered him out. After calming down, Vincent again agreed to help the Doctor, saying that if Amy could soldier on, so could he. As the three of them walked, he told her he could tell she was heartbroken, though she could not.

When they reached the church, he began to paint, despite interruptions from the Doctor. After several hours he spotted the creature in one of the church's windows.

When the Krafayis charged on the three, Vincent tried to ward off the creature. It impaled itself.

Before the Doctor and Amy left, Vincent admitted that without them, his life would take a downwards turn. The Doctor took Vincent to 2010 to a van Gogh exhibit. Dr. Black called him the greatest artist of all time, a man who turned the sorrows of life into the most beautiful art the world had ever seen. Black's description of him as not only the greatest artist but also one of the greatest men of all time reduced Vincent to tears. He thanked Dr. Black, who for a moment realised whom he had just met. Returned to his own time, Vincent thanked the Doctor and unsuccessfully proposed marriage to Amy. He said that he had a new found respect for life. (TV: Vincent and the Doctor)

Later life

The Pandorica Opens. (TV: The Pandorica Opens)

Soon afterwards, however, Vincent came under the care of Dr. Gachet as his fears were realised: his mental health deteriorated further. In his last year he was affected by the transmission of the warning signal of Stonehenge about the Pandorica and was plagued with visions of the Doctor's TARDIS exploding. He painted the subject in The Pandorica Opens, which after thousands of years, ended up in River Song's possession. (TV: The Pandorica Opens) Due to the Doctor's intervention, the TARDIS never exploded and the source of the transmission never existed, stopping the visions from coming to Vincent in the first place. (TV: The Big Bang)

Vincent is extremely troubled during his final months. (TV: The Pandorica Opens)

After returning Vincent to his own time, the Doctor and Amy went back to the exhibit in 2010. They found that, despite their efforts, Vincent still had killed himself the following year. Amy was distraught at having failed to change Vincent's life, but the Doctor assured her that they had made some difference. They saw that the Sunflowers, inspired by Amy in 1890, had been changed and dedicated "for Amy". (TV: Vincent and the Doctor)

Works

Behind the scenes

  • According to The Brilliant Book 2012, a book that contains non-narrative based information; in an alternate universe where all of history happened at once, van Gogh was available on social-networking sites. Cleopatra was a fan of his.
Vincent van Gogh