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The Church in Auvers-sur-Oise

Vincent van Gogh • Painting, June 1890, 94×74 cm
$54.00
Digital copy: 3.1 MB
3434 × 4433 px • JPEG
74 × 94 cm • 118 dpi
58.1 × 75.1 cm • 150 dpi
29.1 × 37.5 cm • 300 dpi
Digital copy is a high resolution file, downloaded by the artist or artist's representative. The price also includes the right for a single reproduction of the artwork in digital or printed form.
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About the artwork
Alternative titles: View from Chevet
Art form: Painting
Subject and objects: Landscape, Urban landscape
Technique: Oil
Materials: Canvas
Date of creation: June 1890
Size: 94×74 cm
Artwork in selections: 149 selections
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Exhibitions history

Description of the artwork «The Church in Auvers-sur-Oise»

Annotation

Vincent spent a little more than two months in Auvers-sur-Oise, a village in the outskirts of Paris, treated by the Doctor Gachet. From the moment of Vincent’s arrival here on May 21, 1890 and his death from a suicidal shot in his chest on July 29, the artist painted like a madman. While staying in Auvers, he made about seventy paintings (over one per day) and a large number of drawings.

The Church in Auvers-sur-Oise, View from the Chevet is the only painting representing in full the church in Auvers, although its silhouette may also be distinguished in the landscape views of the whole village. It was most likely produced soon after artist’s arrival to the village for Vincent mentioned it in a letter to his sister Willemien van Gogh on Thursday, 5 June 1890 as an already made artwork,

“With that I have a larger painting of the village church – an effect in which the building appears purplish against a sky of a deep and simple blue of pure cobalt, the stained-glass windows look like ultramarine blue patches, the roof is violet and in part orange. In the foreground a little flowery greenery and some sunny pink sand. It’s again almost the same thing as the studies I did in Nuenen of the old tower and the cemetery. Only now the colour is probably more expressive, more sumptuous.”

This church, built in the 13th century in the early Gothic style still can be found in Auvers while travelling in the footsteps of Vincent van Gogh. The austere gray building became under the painter's brush a bizarre vision, as if streamed by lava or mud. Taken as a whole, the painting gives an impression of an unbearable heat that ‘melts’ the church and it looks dissolving and deliquescing. But despite the entire landscape is brightly lit by the sun, the building is rendered in its own shadow, completely devoid of light. In one of his letters to Theo, Vincent, being disillusioned by his experience of organized religion long ago, recalls the scene from Shakespeare's King Henry IV comparing the dark emptiness inside a church with "empty and unenlightened preaching."

Author: Eugenia Sidelnikova

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