
The Olive Trees
Vincent van Gogh·1889
Historical Context
Van Gogh painted multiple versions of olive trees at Saint-Rémy between June and December 1889, approaching them with the same obsessive intensity he brought to cypresses and wheat fields. He wrote that olive trees were 'very characteristic of Provence' and that their silver-grey foliage and gnarled trunks gave him a vehicle for exploring the interaction of earth, sky, and organic form. He told Theo he was attempting to capture 'the great struggle between the trees and the ground' — the roots gripping the rocky soil like grasping hands. The Metropolitan Museum version shows the trees from close range, their twisting forms filling the picture plane.
Technical Analysis
Short, curved strokes in silver-grey, blue-green, and olive build the foliage with shimmering agitation. The trunks are rendered in warmer sienna and umber, twisted expressively. The ground beneath is worked in ochre and green with energetic directional marks contrasting with the lighter foliage.
Look Closer
- ◆Each olive tree has individual character — different trunk twist and different canopy shape.
- ◆The warm ochre-orange ground beneath contrasts with the cool silver-grey of the foliage above.
- ◆The sky shifts from warm yellow-white near the horizon to a more saturated blue higher up.
- ◆Van Gogh's foliage brushwork is among his most complex, strokes going in multiple directions.




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