
The Seine Bridge at Asnières
Vincent van Gogh·1887
Historical Context
Van Gogh's 1887 painting of the Seine bridge at Asnières, made during his Paris years, captures the suburban river landscape where he often walked and painted in the summer months. Asnières-sur-Seine — accessible by a short train journey from Paris — was a favorite excursion site for Parisians and a painting location for several avant-garde artists including Seurat, whose Grande Jatte nearby was exhibited in 1886. Van Gogh's bridge painting reflects his Impressionist evolution, the river subject — boats, reflections, sky — giving him material for systematic color observation. The Houston museum's version places this work in a major American collection.
Technical Analysis
The bridge structure provides strong geometric organization within the loose Impressionist treatment of water and sky. Van Gogh's Paris palette brings varied color to what might be a monochromatic industrial subject — blues in the water, greens and warm tones in the river banks and sky. His brushwork captures the reflective surface with broken, directional strokes.
Look Closer
- ◆The bridge's iron structure creates a strong horizontal and diagonal geometry across the canvas.
- ◆Figures on the bridge are silhouetted against the bright sky — dark forms against light.
- ◆The river's surface is rendered with horizontal strokes of mixed blue and green.
- ◆Sailboats in the middle distance use the flat, simplified shapes Van Gogh learned from Japan.




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