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I'm reposting the material below with a slightly different title. I'm surprised no one has picked up
on this interesting topic. I did get the 1988 article and it pretty much answered my questions. Van Gogh painted astro objects in about 10 of his paintings. He certainly had his own way of doing them. The moon is also in The Road with Cypress. Interesting that he did a mirror image of the objects. First Post: =========== Van Gogh's Starry Night depicts the Big Dipper and his Road with Cypress shows Mercury and Venus. Roger Sinnott of S&T discusses this in his Astro Computing Oct. 1988 column. I have copies of both paintings. My issues don't go back that far. Venus and Mercury are easy to pick out, since there are only two astro images. Not certain which planet is which. Can someone give me an idea how to figure out the big dipper? I suspect it is in its winter position with the asterism stretching from left to right across the painting. If so, what's the very large object in the upper right? Part of the dipper? -- Wayne T. Watson (121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N, 2,701 feet, Nevada City, CA) -- GMT-8 hr std. time, RJ Rcvr "... the smallest known metal-rich asteroid -- Amun 3554, about one kilometer in diameter, contains 3.5 trillion dollars' worth of cobalt, nickel, iron and platinum." -- from Seeing in the Dark by Timothy Ferris Web Page: home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews Imaginarium Museum: home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews/imaginarium.html |
#2
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In article ,
Wayne Watson wrote: I'm reposting the material below with a slightly different title. I'm surprised no one has picked up on this interesting topic. I did get the 1988 article and it pretty much answered my questions. Van Gogh painted astro objects in about 10 of his paintings. He certainly had his own way of doing them. The moon is also in The Road with Cypress. Interesting that he did a mirror image of the objects. First Post: =========== Van Gogh's Starry Night depicts the Big Dipper and his Road with Cypress shows Mercury and Venus. Roger Sinnott of S&T discusses this in his Astro Computing Oct. 1988 column. I have copies of both paintings. My issues don't go back that far. Venus and Mercury are easy to pick out, since there are only two astro images. Not certain which planet is which. Can someone give me an idea how to figure out the big dipper? I suspect it is in its winter position with the asterism stretching from left to right across the painting. If so, what's the very large object in the upper right? Part of the dipper? -- I have more than a passing interest in Van Gogh, and wanted to help, but your questions were unclear. Rereading the post several times only confused me more. Glad you found your answers! Starry Skies, Rich |
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If you were confused by what I wrote, try listening to Don McLean's Vincent. That'll keep your mind
busy. :-) Richard DeLuca wrote: In article , Wayne Watson wrote: I'm reposting the material below with a slightly different title. I'm surprised no one has picked up on this interesting topic. I did get the 1988 article and it pretty much answered my questions. Van Gogh painted astro objects in about 10 of his paintings. He certainly had his own way of doing them. The moon is also in The Road with Cypress. Interesting that he did a mirror image of the objects. First Post: =========== Van Gogh's Starry Night depicts the Big Dipper and his Road with Cypress shows Mercury and Venus. Roger Sinnott of S&T discusses this in his Astro Computing Oct. 1988 column. -- I have more than a passing interest in Van Gogh, and wanted to help, but your questions were unclear. Rereading the post several times only confused me more. Glad you found your answers! Starry Skies, Rich -- Wayne T. Watson (121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N, 2,701 feet, Nevada City, CA) -- GMT-8 hr std. time, RJ Rcvr "... the smallest known metal-rich asteroid -- Amun 3554, about one kilometer in diameter, contains 3.5 trillion dollars' worth of cobalt, nickel, iron and platinum." -- from Seeing in the Dark by Timothy Ferris Web Page: home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews Imaginarium Museum: home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews/imaginarium.html |
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On Sat, 12 Jul 2003 14:46:32 GMT, Richard DeLuca ...reflected:
In article , Alan W. Craft wrote: On Sat, 12 Jul 2003 08:10:10 GMT, Richard DeLuca ...reflected: -- I have more than a passing interest in Van Gogh, and wanted to help, but your questions were unclear. Rereading the post several times only confused me more. Glad you found your answers! Starry Skies, Rich His most fascinating works were those produced upon his self-committance, I feel; "Trees in the Asylum Garden", for example. Starry Night was a big disappointment to me when I finally saw it in person. More 'one dimensional' than I expected. I enjoy his Iris paintings the most- they send my emotions into hyperdrive. My mousepad is of that very painting, that is, "Iris", and chosen for its relevance to the state flower of Tennessee. Alan |
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In article ,
Wayne Watson wrote: If you were confused by what I wrote, try listening to Don McLean's Vincent. That'll keep your mind busy. :-) Gee, that's one of the few Don McLean songs that I think I *do* understand..........;-) Starry Skies, Rich |
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