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      • Van Gogh had relationships — usually unhappy ones — with a number of women, but one affair stands out among all others. Sien Hoornik was the only woman he ever lived with and inspired some of Van Gogh's most affecting art.
      www.grunge.com/424625/a-look-at-vincent-van-goghs-love-affair/
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  2. The two had a relationship, and according to Vincent’s friend Paul Gauguin, he was deeply in love with her. On the portrait that Vincent painted of Agostina, she is sitting on a stool at a table shaped like a tambourine.

  3. Was Vincent van Gogh ever lucky in love? Read on for the answer. Vincent had plenty of love interests throughout his life, but things never went smoothly. He got off to a bad start when he fell in love with his niece, Kee Vos-Stricker, who rejected his advances.

  4. Aug 15, 2023 · Van Gogh's relationship with Sien Hoornik. Vincent Van Gogh/Wikimedia Commons. Sometime in early 1882, while living in The Hague, Vincent van Gogh met Sien Hoornik, a sex worker whom he wished to become his model. Hoornik was pregnant at the time she met van Gogh.

  5. Discover the special relationship between Vincent and his younger brother Theo. Read the story.

    • Caroline Haanebeek
    • Eugénie Loyer
    • Kee Stricker
    • Sien Hoornik
    • Margot Begemann
    • Gordina de Groot
    • Agostina Segatori
    • The End

    Caroline and her sister Annet were Vincent’s second cousins on his mother’s side. His love for Caroline went unrequited and she married another man. At the same time, Annet became a sweetheart of Theo (Vincent’s younger brother), but she fell ill and died.

    Eugénie Loyer was the 19-year-old daughter of a principal of a boys’ school and Vincent’s landlady while the artist was living in London. The principal rented him a room when Vincent was taken on as a trainee in 1873 at Goupil art dealers. Vincent and Eugénie got on “like brother and sister”, but nothing more happened; Loyer was secretly engaged to...

    The third woman, Kee Stricker, was also Van Gogh’s cousin. Vincent met her just after the recent death of her husband. However, Stricker’s answer to the marriage proposals was: “No, nay, never”. Yet, Vincent didn’t give up easily and even though both families opposed the relationship, the artist traveled to Amsterdam and turned up on the Stricker f...

    There is no secret that Vincent was much attracted to“those women whom the clergymen damn so and superciliously despise and condemn from the pulpit”– as he wrote to Theo once. Of course, I mean sex workers. In 1882, he became involved with Clasina “Sien” Maria Hoornik (1850–1904), a pregnant sex worker he had met on the street. The family didn’t ac...

    In 1884, Vincent moved back in with his parents in Nuenen. Margaretha “Margot” Begemann (1841–1907) was ten years his senior and the daughter of their neighbors. She responded to Vincent’s advances, but their proposed marriage was opposed by Margot’s sisters. Another problem was that Begemannfrequently suffered from nervousness and mood swings. On ...

    Vincent had contact in Nuenen with a farmer’s daughter, Gordina de Groot, one of the “potato eaters“. When De Groot became pregnant, everyone was positive that Vincent was the father. He denied it, and it was later revealed that he indeed wasn’t the baby’s father. Whatever the case, the parish priest lost patience with all the tittle-tattle and pro...

    What precisely went on between Vincent and Agostina Segatori, the Italian owner of the restaurant Le Tambourin, on the Boulevard de Clichy in Paris, remains unclear. The two had a relationship from December 1886 to May 1887. Segatori was also a famous model who posed for celebrated painters in Paris, such as Édouard Joseph Dantan, Jean-Baptiste Cor...

    Segatori seems to be the last woman Vincent was in love with. After so many failed relationships, while staying in Arles in 1888, Vincent turned for comfort to sex workers and to his only “requited love” – art. His death occurred in the early morning of 29 July 1890, in his room at the Auberge Ravoux in the village of Auvers-sur-Oise in northern Fr...

  6. No, nay, never. At the age of 28, Vincent was visiting his parents when he met his cousin Kee Vos-Stricker. Her husband had recently died. Vincent's feelings for her ran away with him....

  7. A special relationship. In 1872, aged 16, Vincent left his parental home in Brabant and started working as a trainee art dealer for his uncle in The Hague. His earliest surviving letters date...