1. Conceptual Context: From Figurative Art to Subrealist Abstraction
The piece "No Hysteria" is part of a contemporary reinterpretation of Vincent van Gogh's Pair of Shoes (1886), traditionally interpreted as a symbol of the human condition, labor, and vulnerability. Here, the reinterpretation shifts toward subrealist abstraction, merging recognizable elements (the shoes) with gestural distortions, organic textures, and saturated colors, evoking a mental or societal state rather than a simple material representation.
Subrealism here evokes a beyond the real—not a dreamlike surrealism, but an abstraction charged with raw emotion, bordering on Abstract Expressionism (as in de Kooning or Pollock) and a destabilizing digital aesthetic. The shoes, once marked by mud and fatigue, become energetic forms, almost entities traversed by visual tensions.
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2. A philosophical allegory: hysteria as societal pathos
The title "No Hysteria" is a manifesto. It is a response to the collective emotional outbursts—whether political, media-related, or identity-related—that often characterize the contemporary era. Van Gogh, himself a figure of heightened sensitivity and psychological suffering, is invoked here not as a martyr, but as a guide to resilience through art.
- Hysteria vs. Contemplation: The work offers an antidote to the prevailing pathos. The shoes, instead of being symbols of wandering or anguish (as in Heidegger's commentary on Van Gogh), become anchors. They walk, but without rushing, without shouting—in a form of forced, almost meditative serenity.
- Art as healing: By reinterpreting the Shoes through a hybrid aesthetic (acrylic and digital), the artist suggests that creation can heal internal and collective fractures. It's not about ignoring pain, but about transcending it through gesture, color, and movement.
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3. Mixed media: physical and digital painting, between the tangible and the ephemeral
Materiality plays a central role in this reinterpretation:
- Acrylic paint on canvas: The physical base recalls Van Gogh's legacy—impasto, visible brushstrokes, textures that recount the artist's gesture.
- Photography and digital intervention: Once the canvas is photographed, it becomes a field of digital experimentation. Frame-by-frame animations add minimalist movement—it's slow, repetitive, like breathing. Technically, this represents 16 frames animated at 8 frames per second.
- Digital subculture: By integrating a minimalist animation aesthetic, the work is anchored in internet culture—something between hypnotic GIF and post-internet art. It thus becomes accessible and reproducible, yet retains a unique aura thanks to its tangible origins.
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4. The Xanthopsia Collection: Altered Perception as Utopia
Xanthopsia—or "yellow vision"—refers to how Van Gogh perceived the world, particularly under the influence of disorders or medication. In "No Hysteria," yellow isn't just a color: it's a conceptual filter. It represents:
- The search for positivity in the darkness: Even when the shoes look worn and dirty, the yellow shines like a glimmer of hope, a persistent energy. - Duality and Coexistence: Yellow coexists with dark tones, just as suffering coexists with resilience. This duality is at the heart of Van Gogh's approach, and it is reactivated here in a contemporary language.
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5. Synthesis: Art as Remedy in a Hybrid World
"No Hysteria" is much more than a tribute; it is an act of resistance through abstraction. By blending traditional painting and digital language, the work embodies a hybridization of media and eras, while maintaining a profound reflection on the role of art as an antidote to collective hysteria.
This reinterpretation doesn't simply modernize Van Gogh—it uses him as a mirror to question our relationship to emotion, movement, and stability. It offers a path: that of active contemplation, of the liberating gesture, and of a beauty capable of emerging from even the most acute tensions. Art heals, but on condition that we do not flee from reality - that we pass through it, as we walk in revisited shoes.
No Hysteria: Xanthopsia 178:
Tribute to Van Gogh:
« pairs of shoes (1886) »
in Van Gogh Museum collection
Digital art version :
3840 x 2160 px / 4K MP4 / 116 Mo / 8 fps / 1/1 édition on @objktcom