Vincent van Gogh - The Road Menders 1889

Olive Trees Bright Blue Sky 1889 Pine Trees against a Red Sky with Setting Sun 1889 Pine Trees with Figure in the Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889 The Road Menders 1889 The Road Menders 1889 Shepherdess, The after Millet 1889 The Stone Bench in the Garden of Saint-Paul Hospital 1889
The Road Menders 1889

The Road Menders 1889
73x91cm oil/canvas
Cleveland, The Cleveland Museum of Art

<< Previous G a l l e r y Next >>

From The Cleveland Museum of Art:
In May 1889, Van Gogh voluntarily committed himself to an asylum near the small town of Saint-Rémy in Provence. His doctors soon gave him permission to paint on day excursions to surrounding fields. While walking through Saint-Rémy that November, he was impressed by the sight of men repairing a road beneath immense plane trees. "In spite of the cold," he wrote to his brother, "I have gone on working outside till now, and I think it is doing me good and the work too." Rushing to capture the yellowing leaves, he painted this composition on an unusual cloth with a pattern of small red diamonds visible in the picture's many unpainted areas.