Now take the rue de la Tour des Dames. Vincent Van Gogh lived at number 8 on the fourth floor in 1890. He had taken refuge in his brother's apartment there for several months before leaving for Auvers-sur-Oise where he committed suicide on July 27th of the same year. Converted to absinthe by Toulouse-Lautrec and Gauguin, he spent many nights with them at the café Le Tambourin. Van Gogh whose dream was to have his works exhibited, wrote to his brother: “One day or another, I will find a way to do my own exhibition in a café.” These words are particularly significant and demonstrate the difficulty artists had showing their works as well as the important role the café played in the cultural life of the 19 th century. As you reach rue St Georges, look up to the fourth floor of number 43. Perhaps you will get a glimpse of the Goncourt brothers on their balcony. They lived there from 1850 to 1868 observing and describing the lives of their contemporaries. Suffering from terrible headaches, they were in the habit of putting laudanum in their absinthe, a veritable “liquid hashish” to use their words. |
![]() Van Gogh, portrait of the Père Tanguy, 1887 |
|||||
|
||||||
|
||||||