An exhibition focussing on Van Gogh and his affect opened this week on the Château of Auvers-sur-Oise, the village 30 kilometres north west of Paris the place the artist spent his final 70 days. With practically 100 works by a variety of artists, the present traces the painter’s influence on his followers. Whereas authentic work by Van Gogh himself don’t characteristic, it offers an enchanting perception into his artwork.
Léonide Bourges’ Church at Auvers, with curator Wouter van der Veen
Conseil Départemental du Val-d’Oise, Pontoise (portray donated by Wouter and Catherine van der Veen). {Photograph} The Artwork Newspaper
The setting of Van Gogh, Influencer: Legacies in Movement (till 3 January 2027) might come as a shock: a Seventeenth-century château which has been remodeled into an exhibition venue. Constructed on a hillside above the River Oise, it dominates the village of Auvers, the place Van Gogh arrived on 20 Could 1890. The artist should have seen the imposing personal mansion from a distance nearly day by day.
Van Gogh was extremely productive in Auvers, finishing a portray a day. However through the night of 27 July he instantly suffered a psychological disaster, strolling up into the wheatfields above the village and taking pictures himself within the chest. He died of his wounds two days later.
Van Gogh, Influencer opens with a bunch of work of the Auvers space by different late Nineteenth-century artists, offering an enchanting distinction with the Dutchman’s work. When it comes to subject material, an image by the Auvers artist Léonide Bourges most carefully resembles a particular work by Van Gogh – his celebrated Church at Auvers (June 1890, now Musée d’Orsay, Paris).

Van Gogh’s Church at Auvers (June 1890) and Léonide Bourges’ Church at Auvers (Eighties-90s)
Musée d’Orsay, Paris and Conseil Départemental du Val-d’Oise, Pontoise
The angle of the church, with the inclusion of a strolling feminine determine, are so related within the two work that it’s troublesome to find out whether or not Van Gogh influenced Bourges or the reverse. Because the château’s exhibition curator Wouter van der Veen suggests, it would even have been “a curious coincidence”. My very own hunch is that Bourges was paying homage to the Van Gogh, which she might properly have seen hanging within the residence of the native collector Dr Paul Gachet, whom she knew.

Daubigny’s Lady crossing a Discipline (1869) and Van Gogh’s Wheatfield with Crows (July 1890)
Galerie de la Vallée de l’Oise, Auvers and Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis)
One other intriguing hyperlink when it comes to subject material, and this one is actually by likelihood, is between a panorama by the sooner Auvers artist Charles-François Daubigny and Van Gogh’s collection of wheatfield work. In 1869, Daubigny had arrange his easel close to the lane which runs up from the church to the cemetery (the place Van Gogh would later be buried). Though Van Gogh by no means painted from this spot, his wheatfield landscapes had been principally completed just some minutes’ stroll away.
The stylistic distinction between the wheatfields of Daubigny and Van Gogh is hanging. Daubigny produced comparatively realistic-looking atmospheric landscapes, whereas Van Gogh employed daring colors and brushwork to provide extremely private, extra emotional work.
One of many key photos in Van Gogh, Influencer which demonstrates the early influence of the Dutch artist on his fellow painters is Path within the Fields (round 1891-92) by Léo Gausson. One can instantly see its hyperlinks with Van Gogh’s Wheatfield with Crows (July 1890).

Léo Gausson’s Path within the Fields (round 1891-92)
Galerie de la Vallée de l’Oise, Auvers
Gausson doesn’t got down to replicate Van Gogh’s scene, however as a substitute conjures his personal private interpretation, with a twisting path abruptly disappearing into the wheat. The red-hued sky within the centre represents Gausson’s imaginative and prescient of the solar, a key motif in Van Gogh’s work.
Though Gausson didn’t work in Auvers, he actually knew Vincent’s work, having seen it within the Paris house of the Dutchman’s brother Theo. An admirer of Van Gogh, Gausson had wished to change work with him, though this could not be organized with Theo till August 1890, very quickly after the funeral.
Altogether, Van Gogh, Influencer contains simply over a dozen work by different artists created earlier than Van Gogh’s keep in Auvers and round 80 courting from afterwards. All of those later works both consciously or unconsciously signify a debt to Van Gogh. As Van der Veen put it: “Van Gogh threw a stone into the pond, creating ripples which have reached 1000’s of artists, throughout nations and cultures.”
Maison Gachet
The opposite present which opened this week in Auvers is on the Maison du docteur Gachet, the previous residence of Dr Paul Gachet, who cared for Van Gogh on the finish of his life. Gachet, the Expertise of Father and Son, the Assortment of Yves d’Auvers Revealed (till 2 August) offers an uncommon alternative to see work by the physician and his son, additionally named Paul, who had been each beginner artists.
The photographs come from the gathering assembled by Yves Diguet (he adopted the surname d’Auvers), who died in 2023. They’re on mortgage from his daughter, Edmée Dorléans. Work by the Gachets are hardly ever on show.

Dr Paul Gachet (Paul van Ryssel), The crimson Roofs and Hill, Rue Rémy, Auvers (round 1898)
Edmée Dorléans, assortment of her father, Yves d’Auvers
Two photos by Dr Gachet, who painted below the title Paul van Ryssel, stand out. One is a panorama painted from his backyard, which overlooks the roofs of the neighbouring homes on the opposite aspect of the street. Van Gogh knew the backyard properly, having made quite a lot of work there, together with his Portrait of Dr Gachet (June 1890). The view of the roofs can nonetheless be seen immediately, though the cluster of homes has grow to be more and more dense.

Dr Paul Gachet (Paul van Ryssel), Bouquet of Peonies (1907)
Edmée Dorleans, assortment of her father, Yves d’Auvers
Bouquet of Peonies (1907) nearly actually represents flowers picked in Dr Gachet’s backyard. It was painted in Van Gogh’s type, with thick impasto paint. The biggest flower within the center is especially white, with a yellowish centre, introduced relatively as Van Gogh had so typically depicted the solar in his landscapes. The peonies stand in a Japanese vase, which might have been equally admired by Dr Gachet and Van Gogh, who each beloved the artwork of Japan.
Though the present show of labor by Dr Gachet and his son is modest in scale, with ten work in addition to works on paper, guests even have the chance to view the physician’s home, nonetheless with a few of its authentic furnishings.
Following the demise of Dr Gachet’s son in 1962, the villa was bought to a non-public proprietor. It was later acquired by the native departement, opening to guests in 2003. Dr Gachet additionally owned an incredible assortment of Van Gogh work and drawings, which his son donated to the Louvre within the Nineteen Fifties. These are actually on show on the Musée d’Orsay in Paris.
Past the reveals
Lastly, just a few additional suggestions for guests to Auvers on the Van Gogh path (which might be loved on a day journey from Paris). The Auberge Ravoux, the place the artist lodged, has simply opened for its annual season (till 22 November), with the spotlight being the prospect to look into the small room the place he lodged – and died.

The room the place Van Gogh died on 29 July 1890
Auberge Ravoux “Maison de Van Gogh”, Auvers
And eventually, it’s only a quick stroll from the auberge (inn) to the church that Van Gogh depicted so memorably. Above the church, barely greater up the hill, is the cemetery the place Vincent and Theo lie buried, aspect by aspect, beneath a blanket of ivy. Past are the wheatfields, a strong supply of inspiration for Van Gogh and the place the place he made the fateful choice to finish his life. Regardless of this tragedy, his artwork lives on.
Martin Bailey is a number one Van Gogh specialist and particular correspondent for The Artwork Newspaper. He has curated exhibitions on the Barbican Artwork Gallery, Compton Verney/Nationwide Gallery of Scotland and Tate Britain.

Martin Bailey’s current Van Gogh books
Martin has written quite a lot of bestselling books on Van Gogh’s years in France: The Sunflowers Are Mine: The Story of Van Gogh’s Masterpiece (Frances Lincoln 2013, UK and US), Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence (Frances Lincoln 2016, UK and US), Starry Night time: Van Gogh on the Asylum (White Lion Publishing 2018, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale: Auvers and the Artist’s Rise to Fame (Frances Lincoln 2021, UK and US). The Sunflowers are Mine (2024, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale (2024, UK and US) are additionally now obtainable in a extra compact paperback format.
His different current books embrace Dwelling with Vincent van Gogh: The Houses & Landscapes that formed the Artist (White Lion Publishing 2019, UK and US), which offers an outline of the artist’s life. The Illustrated Provence Letters of Van Gogh has been reissued (Batsford 2021, UK and US). My Pal Van Gogh/Emile Bernard offers the primary English translation of Bernard’s writings on Van Gogh (David Zwirner Books 2023, UKand US).
To contact Martin Bailey, please e-mail vangogh@theartnewspaper.com
Please observe that he doesn’t undertake authentications.
Discover all of Martin’s adventures with Van Gogh right here

