Houses at Auvers
Painting by Vincent van Gogh / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Houses at Auvers is an oil painting by Vincent van Gogh. It was created towards the end of May or beginning of June 1890, shortly after he had moved to Auvers-sur-Oise, a small town northwest of Paris, France.
Houses at Auvers | |
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Artist | Vincent van Gogh |
Year | Auvers-sur-Oise, June 1890 |
Catalogue | |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 73 cm × 61 cm (19.7 in × 40.6 in) |
Location | Toledo Museum of Art |
His move was prompted by his dissatisfaction with the boredom and monotony of asylum life at Saint-Rémy, as well as by his emergence as an artist of some renown following Albert Aurier's celebrated January 1890, Mercure de France, review of his work.
In his final two months at Saint-Rémy, van Gogh painted from memory a number of canvases he called, "reminisces of the North," harking back to his Dutch roots. The influence of this return to the North continued at Auvers, notably in F789, The Church at Auvers. He did not, however, repeat his studies of peasant life of the sort he had made in his Nuenen period. His paintings of dwellings at Auvers encompassed a range of social domains.