Casa Branca à Noite (White House at Night) - Vincent van Gogh
Museu Hermitage São Petersburgo Rússia
OST - 73x92 - 1890
White House at Night is an oil on canvas painting created
on 16 June 1890 in the small town of Auvers-sur-Oise by Vincent
van Gogh, six weeks before his death. It is displayed at the Hermitage
Museum, St. Petersburg.
According to the Hermitage Museum, the painting "expresses
the great psychological tension under which Van Gogh found himself"; two
of the windows, considered the "eyes" of a home, are rendered with
"alarming" red splashes, while the star, a sign of fate, is seen as
symbolic of van Gogh's anguish.
It is thought that van Gogh painted White House at Night around
8:00 PM due to the position of the "star" in the painting.
Astronomers Donald Olson and Russell Doescher from the Texas State University-San Marcos calculated
that the star in the painting must be Venus which was bright in the evening sky
in June 1890. The house is the same one depicted in Blossoming Chestnut Tree.
The painting has a turbulent history. It was exhibited in
Switzerland several times during the 1920s, but in the late 1920s disappeared
into the private collection of German industrialist Otto Krebs, Many of his
acquisitions were of a style which was soon to be labelled "degenerate
art" by the Nazis, which contributed towards the already publicity-shy
Krebs keeping his collection secret.
Thought to have been lost after World
War II, the painting languished in the Hermitage archives for fifty years
before resurfacing in 1995 as part of an exhibition displaying artworks looted
by the Soviets at
the end of the war. Three other van Gogh's from Kreb's collection were
also shown: Landscape
with House and Ploughman, Morning: Going
out to Work (After Millet), and the Portrait of
Madame Trabuc.
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