You don’t have to be in Amsterdam to start exploring Van Gogh’s world. The Van Gogh Museum offers strong online tools that work as a standalone experience and a warm‑up for a future visit.
1. Official online collection
On the museum’s website, you can:
- Browse hundreds of works in high resolution.
- Zoom into brushstrokes more closely than in the gallery.
- Read background stories for major paintings and drawings.
Create your own mini‑project:
- Pick five works that interest you.
- Read the official notes.
- Jot down one personal reaction to each (one sentence is enough).
2. Virtual tours and 360° views
Some seasons offer 360° walkthroughs of parts of the museum.
Advantages:
- You get a feel for room layouts and how paintings are grouped.
- You can practice moving through the space before being there physically.
- Good for accessibility planning and anxiety reduction.
🌐 Tip:
Try the virtual tour on a tablet or laptop rather than a phone; the larger screen feels closer to real scale.
3. Educational resources and videos
Look for:
- Short explainer videos about specific works.
- Articles on themes like colour, Japanese influence, or letters.
- Downloadable materials for teachers and students.
You can turn this into a self‑directed course:
- Week 1 – Early Dutch period
- Week 2 – Paris and Japanese influence
- Week 3 – Arles and Sunflowers
- Week 4 – Saint‑Rémy and late works
4. Preparing for your real‑life visit
Use virtual tools as scouting:
- Identify which rooms you feel drawn to already.
- Note any paintings you want to “meet in person”.
- Familiarise yourself with floor maps so you waste less time orienting.
📓 Planning hack:
Make a simple “Van Gogh bucket list” note with 5–10 works you want to find in Amsterdam. Check them off on site.
5. Staying connected after your trip
After you return home:
- Revisit your favourite works online and compare your memory vs reality.
- Follow the museum’s official channels for new research and exhibitions.
- Use images as wallpaper slideshows or screen backgrounds to keep the mood alive.
Virtual resources can’t replace the energy of standing in front of the real canvases — but they can extend and deepen your relationship with Van Gogh’s art.