Optional variations
To save time, you can use a smaller number of multiple-choice questions. Alternatively, you can spread the lesson over two or more class sessions.
Background information
More information about Van Gogh's friends and acquaintances
More information about Van Gogh and his illness
More information about Van Gogh's unrequited loves
Discuss the terms 'fact' and 'fiction' if necessary.
Before the quiz, ask the class: What do you already know about Vincent?
Instructions for the quiz: Students can use their mobile phones to answer the questions. The class can also do the quiz without mobiles, and the answers can be marked on the digital whiteboard (click on the pencil icon for this option).
Introduce the quiz 'Fact or fiction'.
Each question relates to a different claim about Van Gogh. The students must
decide whether the claim is true or false. (If the students aren't using mobiles, have them each keep track of their own personal score.)
The next few slides show a few of Van Gogh's many friends.
Ask the students what they think Van Rappard might have disliked about The Potato Eaters.
Click on the icons to show Van Rappard's criticisms.
Ask the students if they agree with this criticism and how they might have responded to it.Tell the class: Alongside his brother and Van Rappard, Vincent had other friends and acquaintances.
Soon after he went to Paris in 1886 to live with his brother, he began taking drawing lessons from the French painter Fernand Cormon. In Cormon's studio Vincent met other painters, like John Peter Russell.
During Vincent's time in Arles, he asked Bernard and Gauguin (who had gone to Pont-Aven together to work) to paint each other's portraits in exchange for two of his own works. Instead, they each painted a self-portrait with a small portrait of the other artist in the background.
Émile Bernard, Self-Portrait with Portrait of Gauguin, 1888
The Yellow House, 1888
Joseph Roulin, 1889, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo
This item has no instructions
Continue: Vincent had romantic relationships with several women. One of them was Agostina Segatori, shown in this painting. He never married. Many people claim that Vincent liked to visit prostitutes and even had a serious relationship with one of them.
In the Café: Agostina Segatori in Le Tambourin, 1887
Sorrow, 1882
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
This item has no instructions
Tell the class: Despite all the letters Vincent wrote and all our research, there's still a lot we don't know about Vincent. For example, we don't know what illness he had.
This item has no instructions