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Enter Poem or Quote (Required)Required Van Gogh's Yellow House On the corner of a cobblestone street, a yellow house is located, and nearby, there is a bistro to eat at and a café where friends meet, which are illuminated by a sulphur sun under a cobalt sky. A train barrels past the sunlit house of unfulfilled dreams as I enter the building and grin as life passes me by, because I can’t see the future for the tears in my eyes. Through cracked-open green shutters, as reclusive as I can be, I see gawkers with their arms outstretched and fingers pointing, saying to each other, “Look up there, the painter’s crazy.” My heart has grown cold and dry. Destiny has been mean to me. And now, the police come to my door to force me to leave, by decree of law, with a petition signed by the community. Still, the scenery inspires me, and I can’t relinquish my painting. With palette in hand, I mix red, green, blue, and yellow paints and brush their hues, tints, tones, and shades on the canvas to create “The Street” (with audience) on 2 Place Lamartine, Arles, France. *** Note: On May 1, 1888, Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) rented four rooms in the Yellow House at 2 Place Lamartine, Arles, France, and lived there from September 1, 1888, to March 1889. Fellow artist Paul Gauguin (1848–1903) shared the house with Van Gogh from late October 1888 to December 1888. It was here that Vincent van Gogh painted many of his masterpieces. Van Gogh was forced to leave the house in March 1889 when the police, acting on a petition signed by thirty townspeople claiming that Van Gogh was mad and a threat to the community, closed the house. The house was severely damaged during an Allied bombing raid in World War II and later demolished.
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