The Untold Story behind Vincent van Gogh’s Success
#Humanity
Hi,
Not every mom puts her kids’ drawings on the
refrigerator. Some mothers are critical, even cruel. And to be fair, some
drawings are just not that good. But can you imagine being the mother of
Vincent van Gogh and ridiculing your child’s work? It sounds crazy, but crazy
was a major theme of his life.
Vincent van Gogh led a life of madness, one
with many starts and stops that looked as frenetic on the outside as they must
have felt on the inside. Only during the final years of his short life was
Vincent a professional artist, and even then, a tortured one ridiculed by
others, even by his own mother.
So what can we learn from the career of a man
whom history either remembers as a lunatic or a genius? A lot, in fact.
False starts can lead to success
An impassioned young man never content to sit
still for too long, Vincent van Gogh chased many vocations in his youth.
First, he apprenticed for an art dealer in
London, which was an arrangement made by his family and one he eventually
resented. This was where the first of many heart-breaking love affairs would
occur.
Then he pursued a career in Christian
ministry.
After a dramatic conversion experience in
London, the zealous van Gogh was determined to enter the pastorate.
Unfortunately, he failed the required entrance exam to begin his theological
education, which was then followed by another failed attempt at gaining a
religious education.
This was a common theme in van Gogh’s life:
failure after failure, disappointment after disappointment. When it became
clear that in spite of his fervor, he would not likely become a pastor, he was
forced to face the facts. He was going to have to find another path. Still, he
continued to try to force it.
Van Gogh spent some time as a traveling
missionary and evangelist before eventually deciding to become an artist, a
vocation he believed might also honour God. At the time, it looked as if he was
wandering through life; in fact, his parents were deeply concerned, probably
even ashamed of him.
At one point, Vincent’s father looked into
admitting the eccentric boy to an insane asylum. But despite the series of
seemingly disparate events, in retrospect, we see a pattern: from young
Vincent’s long walks as a child in nature, where he marveled at the natural
beauty of creation; to an early apprenticeship for an art dealer; to his failed
attempts at entering the ministry. None of it was an accident.
There was a force, which van Gogh believed to
be God, guiding him through life, helping him find his way. Such a force guides
each of us, leading us to our destiny. But the way this force chooses to reveal
itself is surprising.
At times, it may feel and look like failure;
it certainly did for Vincent. But what’s really happening is our life is being
directed, guided in a certain direction, in a way that is beyond our control.
As we continue to face adversity, we adapt. We grow.
Trust yourself
What made Vincent van Gogh remarkable, and
the reason we know his name today, is that he didn’t quit. At no point did he
ever give up on the search for his calling. He knew he was destined for
greatness, believing God had called him to some sacred service — he just didn’t
know what it was.
“My only anxiety,” Vincent wrote in a letter
to his brother Theo, “is how can I be of use in the world?”
So he kept going, trying new things until he
found something that worked. And as with other stories of calling, this wasn’t
something new. It was something old, something he had always loved but hadn’t
considered a career, maybe due to the jabs of his mother or pressure from his
family to make a living. At the age of twenty-seven, however, Vincent van
Gogh decided to become an artist.
It’s a little disingenuous to say he didn’t
give up. He did, in fact, quit many things. He just never gave up on that inner
nudge he felt to do something significant with his life. He used failure to
help him find out what it was, using each closed door of opportunity as a pivot
point to send him in a new direction.
Vincent van Gogh failed his way to success.
And when he got to his destiny, he realized how everything, from his spiritual
frustration borne of growing up under a Dutch clergyman to his obsession with
the outdoors, all had a purpose. All these things were preparation; they became
his inspiration.
His career as an artist was short-lived,
lasting only ten years. His life ended at the age of thirty-seven at his own
hands, and he died a poor, mentally ill man. His brother had to finance most of
his career, and he experienced little commercial success during his life. And
yet, within a hundred years, his name would become famous, and his works would
go on to be some of the most valuable in the world.
Why gatekeepers matter
How did this happen? It wasn’t just luck.
There were guides who met Vincent at every stop along his journey. These were
the people who both rejected him and affirmed him. Each step was an approach
towards greatness, even when that step involved failure.
When he failed, Vincent grew reflective,
asking himself what he was doing wrong. And what often happened afterward was a
renewed resolve to dedicate himself more fully to his work. As he continued, he
found people who resonated with what he was trying to do, even when he didn’t
fully understand it.
This very much follows what one psychology
calls the “systems theory of creativity”, which I wrote about here.
What it takes for an artist to succeed is not to simply master his or her craft
and wait for people to acknowledge their genius. It doesn’t work like that.
If you want your creative work to succeed,
you have to satisfy three core systems: the self, the field, and the domain.
Practically, what that means is you have to
get good, then you have to find gatekeepers who affirm the importance of your
work, and then you must do something that changes or contributes to your domain
in some way.
For Vincent van Gogh, that meant struggling
for years, first trying to find his calling in life, and then dedicating
himself to the practice of art to the point that he could acquire enough hours
to be great. But that, in and of itself, was not enough.
Vincent had to find people in the art world
whom others trusted, and this was difficult. At the time, the way Vincent
painted was so bizarre and offensive that people didn’t know what to do with
it. It looked like child’s play. But when he met a group of French painters,
everything changed. He realized that his dense paint and broad brushstrokes
full of bright, vibrant colors had a name: Impressionism.
Then there was his brother Theo, who acted as
a patron to his art for a decade, supporting him both financially and
emotionally, if not always fully understanding him. The two van Gogh brothers
were so closely connected that shortly after the latter took his life, the
former joined him in death.
Even in death, Vincent van Gogh had not
attained the level of fame his work would soon experience. It was his sister-in-law,
Theo’s wife, who saw to it that his paintings were sold and eventually
recognized. Were it not for Johanna van Gogh, we may not have ever seen Starry
Night or any number of other paintings that are now worth millions.
Deconstructing genius
So what does this mean for us? If we feel, as
Vincent did, that we have important work to share, then we must consider the
road ahead of us. It won’t be easy, but the reward may be worth the obstacles.
Here are three lessons I think we can learn
from this story:
1. Listen to failure. Vincent van Gogh failed a lot, but each
failure taught him something about himself and moved him closer to his calling.
If you sense you are somehow destined for greatness but don’t know what to do,
do what Vincent did and just start trying things. Failure will be a good friend
and guide you to where you want to go.
2. Persevere in the right things. Not
all failure is a sign that you should quit. Over time, you will learn to trust
yourself. I find that prayer and meditation are worthwhile practices for this.
Deep in your subconscious, there is what my friend Dov calls an “inner knowing”
which will tell you where to go and what to do. In other words, pay attention
to your intuition and keep doing the things it tells you to do.
3. Find people who resonate with your work. Even if that means seeking out other outcasts, as it often does for
creative individuals, you need a collective. The French Impressionists were in
many cases banned from art galleries and their work was censored for years. But
they banded together to create something new and fresh. And over time, people
began to understand it. But until that happened, they had each other, which was
enough encouragement to keep going.
The creative life is filled with rejection
and failure, but that’s not all there is to it. There is also success and
encouragement and meaning when you understand how to navigate this windy road.
Good luck.
To learn more about van Gogh, mastering your
craft, and how creative people succeed, check out the following:
·
The Unfair Truth About How Creative People Succeed (ARTICLE)
This Medium post, which was repurposed and adapted from Jeff Goin's blog, has gone viral
a couple of times and is the best distillation of what I think creative people
need to understand about the way the world works.
·
3 Stages of Personal
Development Borrowed from the Middle Ages (PODCAST). This recent
podcast episode explains how artisans and artists mastered their crafts for
centuries and what we can learn from that model today.
·
Lust for Life by Irving Stone (BOOK). This is the most
entertaining biography of Vincent van Gogh I have ever read. As a biographical
novel, it’s a powerful piece of literature and was painstakingly researched.
Everything about van Gogh in this article came from either that book or this article.
Source: Jeff Goins
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