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Evening (after Millet)
Vincent van Gogh·1889
Historical Context
Evening (after Millet) belongs to a major series Van Gogh executed at Saint-Rémy in 1889–1890, making painted translations of Jean-François Millet's prints. Confined to the asylum during episodes of illness and unable always to work from nature, Van Gogh turned to reproductions of Millet's images of rural labour as source material, treating the process as a musical interpretation — translating the black-and-white prints into his own chromatic key. Millet held a special significance for him: he represented honest engagement with peasant life and the dignity of labour. Evening — showing workers resting in a field — allowed Van Gogh to meditate on rest, release, and the end of the working day.
Technical Analysis
Van Gogh's interpretation imposes his Saint-Rémy palette and mark-making onto Millet's compositional framework, transforming the print's tonal values into a full chromatic range. The figures are rendered with the same energetic brushwork as the landscape, integrating them into the painted surface rather than setting them apart as conventional staffage.
Look Closer
- ◆Van Gogh translates Millet's cool grey print into warm blues, vivid yellows, and rich ochres.
- ◆The prayer figures in Millet's original become peasant silhouettes against a luminous evening sky.
- ◆The field's furrow lines are built with thick parallel strokes giving the earth a tactile worked.
- ◆Van Gogh's expressive brushwork transforms the quiet scene into a more emotionally charged image.




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