Vincent van Gogh - The Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889

Ward in the Hospital in Arles 1889 Trees in the Garden of the Asylum Great Peacock Moth 1889 The Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889 The Iris 1889 Irises 1889 Lilacs 1889
The Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889

The Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889
95x75cm oil/canvas
Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo

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From Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo:
On 8 May 1889, Van Gogh reports for treatment at the asylum Saint-Paul-de-Mausole in Saint-Rémy, not far from Arles. For the first month he is not allowed to leave the grounds, but within the walls is an overgrown garden with pine trees, which proves to be a great source of inspiration for new studies and motifs.
For The garden of the asylum at Saint-Rémy, Van Gogh chooses an unusual viewpoint, next to the wall of the hospital. Due to the diagonal path with a stone bench, the painting acquires a particularly spatial effect. The exuberantly flowering bushes and trees are depicted in a tangle of thickly painted brushstrokes. Despite the huge variety of shapes and colours, the composition has both depth and structure.
n September of the previous year, Van Gogh writes from Arles to his sister Wil about what the colours mean to him: ‘We need good cheer and happiness, hope and love. The uglier, older, meaner, iller, poorer I get, the more I wish to take my revenge by doing brilliant colour, well arranged, resplendent’.