
Landscape with House and Ploughman
Vincent van Gogh·1889
Historical Context
Van Gogh's Nuenen landscapes combining farmhouses and agricultural labourers were systematic attempts to document the social and physical landscape of Brabant before its transformation by industrial modernity. The ploughman in particular held an almost iconic status in his iconographic programme, derived from his deep reverence for Millet's Sower and Man with a Hoe. He wrote repeatedly of his desire to create a Dutch equivalent of Millet — images of rural labour that would carry the same moral weight as Millet's French peasant subjects. These paintings also reflect the influence of Jules Breton and Anton Mauve, his cousin-in-law and first significant painting teacher.
Technical Analysis
A low horizon emphasises the wide Brabant sky, rendered in muted grey-blue. The farmhouse and foreground earth are painted in dark umber and ochre. The ploughman is a small dark figure integrated into the earth, consistent with Van Gogh's compositional practice of subordinating individual figures to the landscape.
Look Closer
- ◆The ploughman is barely visible in the field — a small distant figure whose labor is implied.
- ◆Van Gogh's 1889 Saint-Rémy sky is painted in rhythmic parallel strokes that became his visual.
- ◆The farmhouse walls are thick with impasto — the building's solidity emphasized through paint's.
- ◆Wild cypress trees beside the house are rendered in characteristic flame-like strokes reaching.




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