
Houses Seen from the Back
Vincent van Gogh·1885
Historical Context
Houses Seen from the Back (1885), at the Van Gogh Museum, depicts the rear facades of Nuenen houses—the unglamorous back view that presented crumbling plaster, irregular windows, and the accumulated traces of domestic life rather than the composed fronts intended for public presentation. Van Gogh's persistent interest in back views, overlooked corners, and unpicturesque aspects of familiar subjects reflects his moral resistance to the conventionally beautiful. Seeing houses from the back meant seeing them as they actually were rather than as they wished to appear—an approach consistent with his commitment to honest, unsentimentalised observation.
Technical Analysis
The irregular, unpretentious surfaces of rear house facades give Van Gogh's brushwork a variety of textures to address—old plaster, brick, window reveals, and the informal additions that accumulate on the back of occupied buildings. The dark, earthy palette of his Nuenen period unifies these varied surfaces. Spatial recession is created through the overlapping of building planes rather than formal perspective construction.
Look Closer
- ◆The back façades reveal layers of domestic modification over time — added windows, patched plaster.
- ◆The rear gardens show the functional outdoor spaces of Dutch working life — washing lines and plots.
- ◆Van Gogh renders the plaster and brick surfaces with thick varied paint captures actual wall.
- ◆The composition withholds the public front — the private backs replace the presentable façade.




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