• Exhibition Van Gogh and the Olive Groves
  • When 11 March - 12 June 2022
Comfort in nature

Vincent was 36 when he plunged into painting olive groves in the South of France. He saw many olive trees around the asylum where he stayed for a year because of psychological complaints. The gnarly shapes of the trees reflected Vincent’s artistic and mental journey.

Van Gogh went through a mentally difficult time in the institution. Outdoors, surrounded by nature, he found comfort and strength. He wanted to express that feeling in his olive grove paintings.

‘The murmur of an olive grove has something very intimate, immensely old about it.’
(To Theo from Arles, April 1889)

Vincent van Gogh, Olijfbomen, 1889, Minneapolis Institute of Art

Vincent van Gogh, 'Olive Trees', november 1889. Minneapolis Institute of Art. The William Hood Dunwoody Fund

Experimentation and variation

Van Gogh made fifteen paintings of olive groves, constantly experimenting with various approaches. Fascinated by the gnarly shapes of the olive trees and their ever-changing colours, he painted them over and over. He painted at different times of the day and used colours inspired by the season. Vincent himself considered his paintings of olive trees to number amongst the best he had made in the South of France.

This exhibition reunites Van Gogh’s paintings of olive groves and exhibits them together for the first time, thanks to unique loans from museums in Europe and the United States.

Multimedia guide

Nature had always been an important source of inspiration for Van Gogh. But why were the olive groves so special to him? And why did he paint so many of them? Find out more in the dedicated multimedia guide for the exhibition.

Book your multimedia guide at the same time as your online ticket for € 3.

Paint like Vincent

Channel your inner Van Gogh and get to work in a painting workshop! This workshop is all about capturing emotion in your painting, just like Vincent. Children’s workshops are on Saturdays, and workshops for adults are on Sundays.

Guided tour

Discover the stories hidden behind the artworks in the exhibition! A guided tour is for a maximum of 10 participants.

Extensive research and publication

The exhibition is the result of years of research into Van Gogh’s olive groves, conducted by the Van Gogh Museum in collaboration with colleagues at the The Dallas Museum of Art and the other museums that are now home to these paintings.

The research explored a range of aspects including the order in which Van Gogh made the paintings, the colours he used and his working methods both in his studio, and outdoors. The findings are published in an English-language academic catalogue. The exhibition is also accompanied by an associated Dutch publication.

With thanks to

This exhibition is supported by:

The exhibition was awarded an indemnity by the Cultural Heritage Agency, on behalf of the Minister of Education, Culture and Science.

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