From Van Gogh to Walt Disney, The Magic of Handwriting showcases intimate letters from the past
- Book features 140 examples of penmanship spanning 900 years from the private collection of Brazilian art historian
- Included are handwritten letters from a seven-year-old who would become Britain’s Queen Victoria, and Albert Einstein being critical of Sigmund Freud
![Letters from Vincent van Gogh can be found in The Magic of Handwriting. Photo: Alamy](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/methode/2019/05/11/5cd32c10-7169-11e9-b91a-87f62b76a5ee_image_hires_145652.jpg?itok=RwsSuteE&v=1557557822)
The Magic of Handwriting by Christine Nelson, published by Taschen. 4/5 stars
In 1888, Paul Gauguin left Paris to join fellow artist Vincent van Gogh in Arles, a city in the Provence region of southern France. The next year, Gauguin dramatically claimed in a letter that he had feared for his life during his time there.
“Unfortunately this friend went raving mad,” Gauguin wrote of Van Gogh, “and for a whole month I lived under the constant fear of a mortal or tragic accident.”
Following his breakdown, Van Gogh entered an asylum. In 1890 – as he was about to leave the facility – he wrote to his former landlord asking the man to forward him his meagre furniture (which the struggling artist had already immortalised in three paintings entitled Bedroom in Arles).
![Vincent van Gogh’s The Night Cafe (1888). Photo: Alamy Vincent van Gogh’s The Night Cafe (1888). Photo: Alamy](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/methode/2019/05/11/5c0007b8-7169-11e9-b91a-87f62b76a5ee_972x_145652.jpg)
“Completely recovered,” he was eager to start life afresh. But within two months Van Gogh was dead, having shot himself in the stomach.
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