Van Gogh’s Arles in the south of France: A Japanese artist explores where he sought Japan, now home to LUMA & Lee Ufan.

๐Ÿ“˜ A Curated Guide – Artistic Escape: the South of France Edition
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Hi, Iโ€™m Satomi โ€” a Japanese artist based in London.
Through my travels, I explore the connections between cultures, sharing ideas and aesthetics from a unique Japanese perspective.

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๐Ÿ“– About DAYS UNFRAMED – Art. Travel. Curiosity.
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#vangogh #arles #saintremy #leeufan #lumaarles #arttravel

“I don’t need Japanese pictures here, for I amย 
always telling myself that here I am in Japan.” Van Gogh wrote this from Arlesย 
in 1888. As a Japanese artist, I had to see what he found in person.
In this video, Iโ€™ll take you with me as I walk in his footsteps, and Iโ€™ll show you todayโ€™s Arles artย 
scene – something he could never have imagined. But here’s the big question – did I actuallyย 
find the Japan he was talking about? Hi, Iโ€™m Satomi, a Japanese artist based in London.
Iโ€™m on my way to Arles from Perpignan, and Iโ€™m genuinely excited to see what Van Gogh saw here.
In February 1888, at the age of 34, Van Gogh left Paris by night train and travelled south toย 
this small town. Paris was hectic and expensive, and he longed for brighter colours,ย 
clearer light, and a calmer way of life. There are two main thingsย 
he wanted to do in Arles. First, he dreamed of creating what he calledย 
a โ€œStudio of the Southโ€ โ€” an artist community where painters could live and workย 
together, away from the pressures of Paris. Second, He wanted to bring the colour andย 
clarity he admired in Japanese prints into his own painting. The light and vivid tones ofย 
Arles made him believe he could find his โ€œJapan of the South,โ€ and in his letters he even wroteย 
that he hoped to live here โ€œlike a Japanese.โ€ Now, if you’ve never heard of ukiyo-e, let meย 
quickly explain. They are Japanese woodblock prints. From the 1860s, especially afterย 
the 1867 Paris Exposition, these prints spread through Europe and were sold in Parisย 
markets. Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists were fascinated by their bold outlines,ย 
flat areas of colour, and unusual viewpoints. Here are a couple of his Japanese-inspiredย 
paintings. This one is adapted from a Hiroshige print. And this one is based on an image by Eisen.
He wrote to his brother Theo: “All my work is based to some extent on Japanese art.”
But Van Gogh never actually visited Japan. His idea of โ€œJapanโ€ came from imaginationย 
and a few hundred woodblock prints. As soon as I arrived inย 
Arles, I came straight here. This is where Van Gogh painted Cafรฉ Terraceย 
at Night. That yellow is so vivid and intense. He came here for the light, to paint with theย 
bold simplicity he admired in Japanese prints. As a Japanese artist, I doubt thoseย 
exact โ€œJapaneseโ€ colours were ever here โ€” as you might expect, the paletteย 
is Provenรงal, shaped by different light, climate and local pigments. So he transformedย 
what he saw into his own language. About the colours in this Cafรฉ Terraceย 
at Night, he wrote in a letter: “It often seems to me that the night is evenย 
more richly coloured than the day, coloured in the most intense violets, blues and greens.”
When he painted this cafรฉ, Van Gogh was productive but fragile. He was waiting for Paul Gauguin toย 
join him, dreaming of a small artistsโ€™ commune. Gauguin arrived in October 1888, andย 
for about nine weeks, they lived and worked together in Van Goghโ€™s home, theย 
Yellow House. At first, it seemed perfect, but their personalities clashed. Gauguinย 
was self-assured, sometimes domineering, whereas Van Gogh was intensely sensitive andย 
changeable. Conflict was almost inevitable. Now, youโ€™ve probably heard this nextย 
part before โ€” itโ€™s become one of the most famous stories in art history.
On 23 December, after a heated argument, Gauguin left for a hotel. Later that night,ย 
Vincent cut off part of his left ear. This is Espace Van Gogh, where Vanย 
Gogh was treated after the incident. In the first days, his condition was unstable;ย 
doctors kept him under observation and, for two or three days, placed himย 
in an isolation cell. Reports from the time say he had hallucinationsย 
and feared he was being poisoned. But as he recovered, this courtyardย 
became a refuge. Spring flowers, irises, forget-me-nots, and oleanders drew his eye. Heย 
painted โ€˜The Garden of the Hospitalโ€™ and โ€˜Ward in the Hospitalโ€™, turning pain into colour. Whenย 
he was discharged in January, he tried to return to normal life. By late February, the neighboursย 
had had enough. About thirty local residents signed a petition asking the mayor to have himย 
committed, and the police closed the Yellow House. Vincent wrote on 19 March: โ€œMy houseย 
has been shut up by the police.โ€ That rejection changed everything. He knew heย 
couldnโ€™t stay in Arles anymore. In May 1889, he voluntarily entered the asylum at Saint-Rรฉmyย 
so he could recover safely and keep painting. So I wanted to see Saint-Rรฉmy for myself. Iย 
took a taxi, about a 30-minute drive. This place hit me even harder emotionally.ย 
I still think about it sometimes. When I got to the asylum, oh my goodness,ย 
I got goosebumps. It was strangely quiet, maybe just too quiet, that emptiness.ย 
The silence was almost frightening. Walking along the corridor, you will see glassย 
cabinets of medical instruments and nursesโ€™ uniforms – quite unsettling.
Life here followed a simple, supervised routine. He was still strugglingย 
with hallucinations and severe mood swings, but his doctor gave him a small room to paintย 
in, and he kept working in that tiny space. What stayed with me was the next room. Itโ€™s oneย 
of the places Iโ€™ll never forget from my time in the south of France. Itโ€™s a reconstruction of hisย 
bedroom. Seeing it was overwhelming, knowing what he had been through. I couldnโ€™t help wonderingย 
how he felt here, looking out through that small window and painting through his darkest period.
I hope youโ€™ll have the chance to see it for yourself one day. Iโ€™d love to hear your thoughts.
But above all, this tiny space is where one of the worldโ€™s most famous paintings was born: The Starryย 
Night. Youโ€™ve probably seen it in a schoolbook Through The Starry Night, Van Gogh wanted toย 
capture more than what he could see. Natureโ€™s energy and movement, and a spiritualย 
connection between earth and sky.. It wasn’t about realistic representation, itโ€™sย 
the emotion the landscape stirred in him. I headed back to Arles, and now let me show youย 
today’s art scene in Arles. The two places you shouldnโ€™t miss are LUMA Arles and Lee Ufan Arles.
These places might represent what Van Gogh was trying to create.
LUMA was built by Swiss collector Maja Hoffmann. She invested at around $150 millionย 
to create one of Europe’s largest contemporary art complexes. Frank Gehry designed the tower, sayingย 
he wanted to โ€˜evokeโ€™ Van Goghโ€™s The Starry Night. Here, contemporary artists exploreย 
the same questions Van Gogh had: How do you capture light? How doย 
you make the ordinary transcendent? Itโ€™s striking to see how strongly the town nowย 
revolves around art, largely thanks to his legacy. And then there’s Lee Ufan Arles. Lee Ufan wasย 
one of my favourite artists. He’s Korean-born but moved to Japan and became the leading theoristย 
of Mono-ha, Japan’s first internationally recognised contemporary art movement.
This museum was designed by Tadao Ando. I have such vivid memories of Lee Ufan’s museumย 
on Naoshima Island in Japan, also designed by Ando. Experiencing their collaboration again,ย 
this time in France, was incredibly moving. Perhaps Lee Ufan was looking for something Vanย 
Gogh wanted, but from the opposite directionโ€”not vibrant expression, but quiet contemplation.ย 
The ma, the negative space, that speaks to something deep in Japanese aesthetics.
Decades later, what Van Gogh wanted to create in the 1880s is here. His visionย 
of an artists’ community became reality. So before getting into my conclusion, I couldnโ€™t show everything I saw in Arles in thisย 
video, but I created a curated guide introducing the places that inspired me during my two monthsย 
in the south of France. If youโ€™re an art lover, Iโ€™m sure youโ€™ll enjoy it. It also includesย 
backstories of the places I visited. You can find the link below, and your support alwaysย 
helps me keep creating, so thank you so much. My conclusion to the question, didย 
I find the Japan Van Gogh mentioned? Obviously, it wasnโ€™t Japan at all. Theย 
lighting, the colours, the architecture.. Everything feels entirely Provenรงal.
But hereโ€™s what I discovered: maybe imagination is more powerful than reality for artists. Vanย 
Goghโ€™s imagined Japan inspired revolutionary art. Van Gogh once wrote to Gauguin: โ€œHow I watchedย 
out to see โ€˜if it was like Japan yetโ€™! Childish, isnโ€™t it?โ€ Even he knew hisย 
search was somewhat naรฏve. I think he was looking for a place where he couldย 
just calm down and focus on creation – the bright colours he couldnโ€™t see in Paris, the simplifiedย 
way of seeing he learned from ukiyo-e prints. As someone from Japan whoโ€™s lived in Londonย 
for eight years, I feel this in some ways. The light in London wasnโ€™t bright enoughย 
for me to get inspiration sometimes. The busy life juggling a full-time job and painting.ย 
I felt that same urgency Van Gogh probably felt. Sometimes, not seeing a place in person givesย 
the imagination depth. The sense of longing is powerful. I felt it when I first moved toย 
London, a city Iโ€™d long dreamed of living in back in Japan. But that pure, delicate feelingย 
never quite returns once youโ€™re used to a place. We can do a Google Images search forย 
any place on earth now. Van Gogh had only imagination and a few woodblockย 
prints. Yet his โ€˜Japanโ€™ feels more alive, more urgent than anything I can find online. After two months in the south of France, Iย 
started to feel drawn back to Japan โ€” to see the ‘real’ Japan he might have wanted to visit โ€”ย 
with my own eyes shaped by eight years in London. Maybe thatโ€™s what we search forย 
when we travel, not new places, but new eyes. Van Gogh found the disciplineย 
of looking he borrowed from Japanese art. And perhaps thatโ€™s enough – that beautifulย 
collision between our dreams and reality. Next, the last destination on my Southย 
of France trip is Aix-en-Provence. This is where Paul Cรฉzanne was bornย 
and created his masterpieces, and I got to visualise my dream there.ย 
There are still so many places and experiences I want to share with you, soย 
don’t forget to subscribe to my channel. Thank you for watching, and Iย 
will see you in the next one.

7 Comments

  1. i didn't know the asylum can be visited. i've lived years in the region and never heard of it to be open. i love Arles btw, one of my favorite towns in southern france. i used to live in Aix-en-Provence too. hope you liked it.

  2. You have inspired me to start painting again. I used to paint but recently I have been concentrating on being a writer. Yes all artists are dreamers, we live in our imagination. I agree that the story of Van Gogh is emotionally very moving. I love French Impressionist Art too. I am an Englishman and I am learning French. I hope to live in Paris in the future as a writer and a film maker and now you have inspired me to paint also! Thank you!

  3. Thank you for your intelligent and inspired comment. Do you know Louis Anquetin ? a talented french artist and friend of Van Gogh. His painting " Boulevard de Clichy ร  5 heures" 1887, probably inspired the famous " Cafรฉ terrace at night" that Van Gogh painted in Arles a year later (1988)
    Franรงois

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