Wheat Field at Auvers with White House

Vincent van Gogh

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Keywords: WheatFieldAuversWhiteHouse

Work Overview

Wheat Field at Auvers with White House
Vincent van Gogh
Date: 1890; Auvers-sur-oise, France *
Style: Post-Impressionism
Genre: landscape
Media: oil, canvas
Dimensions: 48.6 x 63.2 cm
Location: Philips Collection, Washington, DC, US


Wheat Field at Auvers with White House was made in June. The painting is mainly a large green field of wheat. In the background is a white house behind a wall and a tree.


Failing to find a vocation in ministry, Van Gogh turned to art as a means to express and communicate his deepest sense of the meaning of life. Cliff Edwards, author of Van Gogh and God: A Creative Spiritual Quest wrote: "Vincent's life was a quest for unification, a search for how to integrate the ideas of religion, art, literature, and nature that motivated him."[1]


Van Gogh came to view painting as a calling, "I feel a certain indebtedness [to the world] and ... out of gratitude, want to leave some souvenir in the shape of drawings or pictures – not made to please a certain taste in art, but to express a sincere feeling."[2] When Van Gogh left Paris for Arles, he sought an antidote to the ills of city life and work among laborers in the field "giving his art and life the value he recognized in rural toil."[3]


In the series of paintings about wheat fields, Van Gogh expresses through symbolism and use of color his deeply felt spiritual beliefs, appreciation of manual laborers and connection to nature.