Description
Like Two Poplars in the Alpilles near Saint-Rémy (on view nearby), Vincent van Gogh painted this autumnal landscape while living in a psychiatric hospital near Saint-Rémy in southern France where he was treated for severe depression. Understanding that painting from nature eased his symptoms, Van Gogh’s physician permitted the artist to paint landscapes outside. Van Gogh described this painting in a letter to his brother Theo: “The last study I did is a view of the village, where they were at work under some enormous plane trees—repairing the pavements. . . . There are heaps of sand, stones, and the gigantic trunks—the leaves yellowing and here and there you can get a glimpse of a house front and small figures.”
Provenance
Theo van Gogh [1857-1891], Paris, France (1890); Julien Leclercq [1865-1901] Paris, France (see document b1533 v/1962 in the archive of the Van Gogh Museum; (Schuffenecker Brothers, Paris, France, sold to Gustave Fayet, Igny, France); Gustave Fayet [1865-1925], Igny, France; Gilbert E. Fuller, Boston, MA (1929-1931); (Paul Rosenberg, New York, NY, July 18, 1947, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1947-)
Accession Number
1947.209
Medium
oil on fabric
Dimensions
Framed: 104.5 x 124.5 x 7.6 cm (41 1/8 x 49 x 3 in.); Unframed: 73.4 x 91.8 cm (28 7/8 x 36 1/8 in.)
Classification
Painting
Credit Line
Gift of the Hanna Fund