
Basket of Potatoes
Vincent van Gogh·1885
Historical Context
Basket of Potatoes (1885), at the Noordbrabants Museum, continues Van Gogh's sustained engagement with the potato as a symbol of peasant life during his Nuenen period. The basket itself—a woven container of agricultural use—situates the potatoes within their working context, emphasising the chain of labour from field to kitchen. Painted in the same year as The Potato Eaters, this still life belongs to a concentrated body of work in which Van Gogh was building a moral and aesthetic vocabulary centred on the objects of rural working-class life. The Noordbrabants Museum's holding is particularly appropriate given the painting's deep roots in the North Brabant countryside.
Technical Analysis
The basket's woven structure and the irregular potato forms together require Van Gogh to develop two distinct brushwork approaches within the same small composition—the geometric interlace of the basket contrasting with the organic, irregular surfaces of the potatoes. The very limited palette of dark earth tones—russets, ochres, and browns—is consistent with his Nuenen period approach to still-life subjects.
Look Closer
- ◆The potatoes are depicted in their dirty, earthen state — exactly as they came from the ground.
- ◆The basket's woven structure is rendered with the Nuenen attention Van Gogh gave to craft objects.
- ◆Van Gogh's dark Nuenen palette gives the potatoes' dull brown its full weight without brightening.
- ◆A shadow on the table beneath the basket grounds the composition — without it the basket would.




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