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Van Gogh, Vincent - Portrait of Dr. Paul Gachet (1890) - Woven Blanket

Van Gogh, Vincent - Portrait of Dr. Paul Gachet (1890) - Woven Blanket

Regular price $63
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Printify

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$63
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Description

The Kind of Thing You Keep

This is a woven blanket, not a printed one — the image lives in the structure of the fabric itself, the way it has in handmade textiles for centuries. Cotton, edge-to-edge color, fringe that extends the design past the border. Drape it over the back of a chair, fold it at the foot of the bed, pull it onto the couch on a slow afternoon. Three sizes. Note: mockups do not fully represent the finished product because of the interpretive nature inherent in the making.

Care Instructions

Machine wash cold (max 30°C / 90°F) on a gentle cycle with mild detergent. Non-chlorine bleach only if needed. Tumble dry on low heat.

Art Story

The Melancholy Mirror

Vincent van Gogh painted Dr. Gachet because he found a man whose soul was as shattered as his own. It was 1890 in Auvers-sur-Oise. The air smelled of damp earth and lavender. Van Gogh was fresh out of the asylum, looking for a savior when he found a doctor who looked like he needed one too.

Gachet sits with his head resting on a weary hand. His eyes aren’t looking at the viewer, but instead regard the end of the world. On the red table sits a sprig of foxglove, a garden source of the substance digitalis, used as a heart medication. In the late 19th century, psychology and neurology were brutal, primitive attempts to navigate an internal landscape no one understood. Doctors like Gachet were trying to cure the mind they barely understood while the steam engine and the telegraph made the world move too fast for the human spirit to keep up.

This is the human face of modernism’s exhaustion, the birth of aesthetic Expressionism trying to shed the skin of Post-Impressionism. Van Gogh used cobalt blues that feel like ice and reds that feel like a fever. He died only months after completing this painting. It took a century after that for the first version of this particular painting to be sold at auction for $82.5 million US. The world finally decided to pay for the pain it had ignored when the paint was still wet.

References

Bailey, M. (2018). Starry Night: Van Gogh at the Asylum. White Lion Publishing.

Distel, A., & Stein, S. A. (1999). Cézanne to Van Gogh: The Collection of Doctor Gachet. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Naifeh, S., & Smith, G. W. (2011). Van Gogh: The Life. Random House.

Pickvance, R. (1986). Van Gogh in Saint-Rémy and Auvers. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Van Gogh, V. (1996). The Letters of Vincent van Gogh. Penguin Classics.

Shipping & Satisfaction

Shipping & Satisfaction

Free shipping on all US orders, always.

Every order ships to US addresses at no additional cost. Allow up to 10 business days from fulfillment for delivery.

Your investment is protected. Material or print defects are replaced or fully refunded — no friction, no negotiation. If the work doesn't resonate aesthetically within 5 days of receipt, reach out and we'll make it right.

One note worth reading before you order: because every piece is produced on demand, we're unable to accommodate returns for incorrect size selections. Consult the product specs before you commit — they're there to make sure what arrives is exactly what you envisioned.

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