La maison de La Crau (The Old Mill) (1888) by Vincent van Gogh

  • Artwork Name
    La maison de La Crau (The Old Mill) (1888)
  • Artist
    Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), Dutch
  • Dimensions
    Oil on canvas
  • Collection Source
    Van Gogh Museum
  • License
    Public Domain Content: Free for Personal & Commercial Use
  • 3670 x 4443 pixels, JPEG, 15.96 MB
  • Once payment is complete, the download link will be sent to your PayPal email.

About the Artist

Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), Dutch, Dutch post-Impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh, born in Zundert, Netherlands, revolutionized modern art with his emotive brushwork and vivid color palettes. Despite a turbulent life marked by mental illness and poverty, he produced over 2,000 artworks, including masterpieces like The Starry Night and Sunflowers. His career began in earnest at age 27 after abandoning earlier pursuits in art dealing and religious ministry. Van Gogh’s work, initially dismissed as chaotic, later became foundational to Expressionism and Fauvism. He died by suicide at 37, leaving a legacy that reshaped 20th-century art.

Artwork Story

Vincent van Gogh’s *La maison de La Crau (The Old Mill)* captures the rustic charm of the French countryside with his signature swirling brushstrokes and vibrant colors. The painting depicts an old mill standing against a windswept sky, its weathered walls and thatched roof bathed in golden light. Van Gogh’s thick, expressive layers of paint bring texture to the scene—the rough stone, the swaying grass, the clouds twisting like living things. There’s a quiet energy here, as if the landscape itself is breathing, pulsing with the artist’s restless vision.

Painted during his time in Arles, this work reflects van Gogh’s fascination with rural life and his desire to find beauty in simplicity. The mill isn’t just a building; it feels like a character, rooted in the earth yet reaching toward the sky. Shadows stretch long across the field, suggesting late afternoon, a moment suspended between daylight and dusk. Every stroke feels deliberate, almost urgent, as if van Gogh was racing to capture the fleeting magic of the scene before it vanished.


View More Artworks