Van Gogh and Absinthe is an investigation into a day in the life of an artist who catapulted the contemporary art world to where it is today. With artists continuing to change and expand the definition of art. It is increasingly difficult to understand where a particular art movement originated. Society has become engrossed with capitalism and consumerism. Its ability to allow art and entertainment, as we know it, to exist has created a diversity and therefore a divergence from any sort of artistic community.
At this point much of the civilized world is engrossed with technology. Technology's rapid evolution has taken an established set of rules and scattered them across a web of wires. The idea of artists labeling a particular art movement appears highly unlikely. The constant force-feeding of classification is the need of society to interpret its own existence. Nowhere does this apply more than to the Post-Modern art world. Critics, art historians, and even artists have been wrestling with how Post-Modernism has developed. With the advancement of technology, global communication and more specifically the World Wide Web, many individual art movements have begun to take shape on their own. Now more than ever, the idea of a few powerful art dealers, historians, or critics creating the next Vincent Van Gogh, pales in comparison to the chance of the individual artist leaving a mark on the art world through the Internet.
Van Gogh and Absinthe's intention is to offer insight into the origin of the journey of Modern and Post-Modern Art, how Van Gogh has affected it presently and how the attitude of Vincent continues to shape the artists of tomorrow. To do this, this thesis will focus on the short film Van Gogh and Absinthe, a stop-motion animation about a day in the life of the artist, Vincent Van Gogh. If there was ever one artist who signified the essence of this thesis it had to be Van Gogh. Vincent Van Gogh also lived at a time of great change and wonder. The foundations of Modern art and Impressionism were just forming. But each and every day of this artist's life was spent questioning, why am I doing this, where do I fit into this puzzle and what impact am I making on this world?
Produced and Directed by Kris Kluthe, Greg Parrish and Seth Roe.
Is this by the director of the tool videos, it seems similar?
tatorsal 2 years ago
Really brilliant I find you short very inspiring and I love how you designed the models and walls etc. The green on Van Gogh's face and eye's was a great touch bravo! I wish more people knew about this, I'll certainly tell all my friends ;) x
Bevz91 2 years ago
Vincent wasn't suffering from mental illness when he painted wheat fields.
bnprenaissance 3 years ago
wow!
darcysvd 3 years ago
I enjoyed this very much. Very well done!
Are you going to do more?
wink359 3 years ago
Tim Burton - does this motion stop animation stuff. This is so cool...
geargail 3 years ago
cool vid, the guy was a brilliant painter and a serious alcoholic (as part of general state of mental illness) who had been drinking hard every where for many years. after his death his brother and art dealer covered up the fact that he was mentally unstable and an addict. who knows why. respect or opportunism?
beerfestagogo 4 years ago
check out absinthkits dot com
absinthman69 4 years ago
This was really cool, I loved it!!!
ohmnipotent 4 years ago
nice video! unfortunate that van gogh was so poor he drank bootleg fake absinthe (with copper sulfate and no wormwood) and his own paint thinner for that starry night effect.
djfl00d 4 years ago