Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon

Appreciation

Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon Nederland Vincent van Gogh Gallery and Appreciation

Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon is one of the lesser recognized landscapes from Vincent van Gogh's Saint-Rémy period. Although rarely exhibited outside its home in Sao Paulo, Brazil, this painting nevertheless presents some interesting aspects for the viewer--both compositional and thematic.

Colours and composition

Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon is an intriguing composite of common themes found in works throughout Van Gogh's career, but at the same time some specific characteristics set it aside from other paintings.

Olive trees and cypresses are often portrayed in paintings from Van Gogh's Saint-Rémy period. But the trees in Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon are less imposing and less intricately detailed. Van Gogh's cypresses are famous, but those seen in the current work appear in the distance almost as an afterthought, lacking the majesty and turbulence that so often characterize Van Gogh's cypress trees. The olive trees, too, appear small and brush-like, lacking in the stately olive orchards found in paintings such as Olive Grove. The "toned down" quality of the trees is likely intentional, however, so as not to divert attention from the couple in the foreground.

The painting is unusual, too, in that it depicts twilight. The vast majority of Van Gogh's Arles and Saint-Rémy works are set in daylight under the scorching Provençal sun. Twilight landscapes were more common in the early years of Van Gogh's career (see Autumn Landscape at Dusk, from the Nuenen period, for example), but in later years Van Gogh abandoned twilight scenes for the most part. Without question, Van Gogh took wonderful stylistic license with his skies--blazing crescent moons shimmering in broad daylight (see Table 1 below), but the straightforward depiction of dawn and dusk was rare in the last years of Van Gogh's career.

Unusual, too, is the almost square size of the canvas of Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon. With a few notable exceptions (Van Gogh's "double square" landscape paintings from his Auvers period, for example), Van Gogh executed works in a standard portrait or landscape format--regardless of the size of canvas used. In his Paris period Van Gogh experimented with some charming oval works (Basket of Sprouting Bulbs, for example), but for the most part he preferred a standard rectangular format. The current work is notable for its uncharacteristically square ratio.

Contradictions

In addition to some of the intriguing stylistic nuances of Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon, there are also some contradictions in terms of the painting's background which warrant attention.

The dating, for example. Most references place the work late in Van Gogh's Saint-Rémy period, but as Ronald Pickvance points out, there are suggestions that the work may, in fact, have been executed several months earlier in October, 1889.

Another contradiction arises with regards to whether Van Gogh ever mentioned Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon in his letters. Pickvance maintains that the painting is never once mentioned in any of Van Gogh's surviving letters and yet one of the world's foremost authorities on the letters, Jan Hulsker, states that the work is mentioned in two of Van Gogh's letters: 644 and W1. Surprisingly, Hulsker appears to be mistaken. Letter 644 describes several paintings Van Gogh was working on, but the description that matches the current work the most closely would seem to be "a cypress with a star" and yet this is almost certainly Road with Cypress and Star and not Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent Moon. In Letter W1 Van Gogh writes to his sister Wil of "the orchards of olive trees . . . with their very different skies of yellow, pink and blue colours" and yet the colours described are completely different than the greens and oranges of the current work.