
Portrait of the Artist's Mother
Vincent van Gogh·1888
Historical Context
Van Gogh painted a portrait of his mother — Anna Cornelia Carbentus — in October 1888 at Arles, working from a black-and-white photograph sent by his sister Wil because his mother refused to sit for him in person. He made a version for Wil and kept one for himself. He described the process to Wil as a form of 'colour translation' — converting the grey tones of the photograph into the warm colour range he associated with his Dutch heritage and the northern light of his childhood. The grey palette of this portrait deliberately evokes that northern light, and Van Gogh wrote that he preferred to see her 'in grey' to preserve the quality of the memory.
Technical Analysis
The palette is notably cooler and more restrained than Van Gogh's other Arles portraits — grey, olive, and cool blue dominate. The face is rendered with careful attention to form despite the photographic source. The background is kept neutral, avoiding the vibrant decorative patterning of his more exuberant sitter portraits.
Look Closer
- ◆The grey-green background was chosen to echo the specific grey-green of Anna Cornelia's eyes.
- ◆The mother's black mourning dress creates a strong dark mass chosen for its graphic authority.
- ◆The face is built from the broken directional brushwork of the Arles period but applied with.
- ◆The white hair cap is painted with cool blue-grey shadows distinguishing it from the white of.




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