It's a project that is "both sexy and has brains," she said, because it will draw visitors but also teach them how to look at pictures.
Curators brought together more than 30 paintings and works on paper, following van Gogh's career in the Netherlands and in France.
They began with van Gogh's 1889 paintings "The Large Plane Trees," held by the Cleveland Museum of Art, and "The Road Menders," which belongs to the Phillips. These are the first two versions of a composition van Gogh sought to perfect. They are usually displayed separately but now hang side by side, showing how van Gogh developed the scene's trees, human figures and other details.
Another featured repetition includes van Gogh's series of portraits of "The Postman Joseph Roulin" in Arles, France. Roulin was a friend and drinking companion to van Gogh. After Roulin's third child was born, van Gogh remarked that his friend was "aglow," and he wanted to paint a portrait of the proud father. He went on to make six paintings and three drawings of his friend.
The portraits have rarely, if ever, been shown together, curators said. They are usually displayed individually by museums in New York, Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, Switzerland and the Netherlands.
During the period when he was painting the postman, van Gogh sliced off part of his ear in 1888 and was hospitalized. Roulin visited van Gogh in the hospital and took him on walks. One painting was likely intended as a gift for the loyal friend, curators said.
Van Gogh experimented with different colors and backgrounds as he painted his postman friend in uniform.
"Many artists repeat themselves. Many artists do a work on site and come back to the studio to revise it, refine it, strengthen the composition ... but we learn a great deal about van Gogh from looking at how he did this," said curator Eliza Rathbone.
Van Gogh was interested in transforming his portrait into something more universal, she said. In his paintings, he used color to express harmonies and emotions in ways that give viewers of his work a "felt response," Rathbone said.
"What we see really," Rathbone said, "is an artist who is turning the corner into the 20th century and lays the groundwork for great artists like Matisse."
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The Phillips Collection: www.phillipscollection.org
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Follow Brett Zongker on Twitter at https://twitter.com/DCArtBeat .