1r:1
My dear Theo,
Thanks very much for your letter and for the 50-franc note it contained. The exchange you made with Boch is very good,1 and am very curious to see what sort of thing he’s making at present.
I hope that Jo’s health is better, since you say that she’s been indisposed. Indeed, you must come here as soon as possible, nature is very, very beautiful here, and I’m longing to see you all again.
Mr Peyron wrote to me two days ago. His letter is enclosed. I told him that it seemed to me sufficient to give the lads ten francs or so.2
Now the canvases from down there have arrived, the Irises have dried well and I dare believe that you’ll find something in them;3 thus there are also some roses,4 a wheatfield,5 a little canvas with mountains6 and finally a cypress with a star.7
This week I’ve done a portrait of a young girl of 16 or so, in blue against a blue background, the daughter of the people where I’m lodging. I gave her that portrait but I’ve done a variant for you, a no. 15 canvas.8
Then I have a canvas one metre long by only 50 centimetres high, of fields of wheat,9 and one that makes a pendant of undergrowth,  1v:2 lilac trunks of poplars, and underneath them some flower-dotted grass, pink, yellow, white and various greens.10
Finally a night effect – two completely dark pear trees against yellowing sky with wheatfields, and in the violet background the castle encased in the dark greenery.11
The Dutchman12 is working quite assiduously, but still deludes himself considerably about the originality of his way of seeing. He does studies a little like Koning did, a little grey, a little green with a red roof, a whitening road.
What can you say in a case like that, if he has money then certainly he does right to do painting. But if he has to scheme a lot to sell them I feel sorry for him doing it, painting, as I pity others for buying it at a price that’s relatively too high. If, though, he just works assiduously every day, he might get there. But alone or with painters who work little he wouldn’t do much, I think.  1v:3
I hope to do Miss Gachet’s portrait next week,13 and perhaps I’ll also have a country girl to pose too.
I’m pleased that Boch is doing this exchange with me, for I thought that, relatively, they’d paid a little too much for the other canvas,14 being friends.
I’d very much like to come to Paris for a few days a little later, precisely in order to go and see Quost once, to see Jeannin, one or two others. I’d very much like you to have a Quost, and there would probably be a way of exchanging one.15 Gachet will come today to see the canvases from the south.
Good fortune with the little one, and good handshake in thought for you and Jo.

891

Br. 1990: 896 | CL: 644
From: Vincent van Gogh
To: Theo van Gogh
Date: Auvers-sur-Oise, Tuesday, 24 June 1890
more...

 
 
 
close
a. Read: ‘Boch’.
[595]
2. Peyron’s letter to Vincent and his reply to it are not known; the doctor must have written about the final settling of accounts, among other things. Peyron’s letter of 1 July 1890 (letter 895) is his response to the letter Vincent says he has written here.
3. Irises in a vase (F 680 / JH 1978 [2905]) and Irises in a vase (F 678 / JH 1977 [2904]).
[2905] [2904]
4. Roses in a vase (F 681 / JH 1976 [2903]) and Roses in a vase (F 682 / JH 1979 [2906]).
[2903] [2906]
5. This is Green wheatfield (F 718 / JH 1727 [2800]). See cat. Otterlo 2003, p. 291.
[2800]
6. Probably Landscape in the neighbourhood of Saint-Rémy (F 726 / JH 1874 [3107]), which measures 33 x 41 cm. Another possibility is Orchard in blossom at the foot of the Alpilles (F 723 / JH 1722 [2795]), which measures 37.5 x 30.5 cm.
[3107] [2795]
7. Road with a cypress and a star (F 683 / JH 1982 [2907]).
[2907]
8. Adeline Ravoux (F 768 / JH 2035 [2926]) and Adeline Ravoux (F 769 / JH 2037 [2927]). The latter, measuring 71.5 x 53 cm and therefore a no. 15 canvas, did in fact come into Theo’s possession. Adeline, the eldest daughter of the innkeepers Mr and Mrs Ravoux, was 13 years old. Sixty-three years after the event, she wrote about posing for Van Gogh. See Ravoux 1957, and Hulsker 1990-1, p. 428.
[2926] [2927]
9. This was Wheatfields (F 775 / JH 2038 [2928]); Van Gogh included letter sketches after it in letters 893 and 896.
[2928]
10. Couple walking between rows of poplars (F 773 / JH 2041 [2930]).
[2930]
11. Landscape at twilight (F 770 / JH 2040 [2929]).
[2929]
13. This resulted in Marguerite Gachet at the piano (F 772 / JH 2048 [2932]).
[2932]
14. For The red vineyard (F 495 / JH 1626 [2745]), for which Boch’s sister Anna had paid 400 francs, see letter 875, n. 2.
[2745]
15. The exchange probably never took place. The estate does, however, contain a landscape drawing by Quost.
Quost’s Garden with hollyhock, c. 1881-1890, must once have been in Theo’s possession as well, given its dedication: ‘A Theo van Gogh / Ce tableau qu’aime tant mon ami Vincent / Bien amicalement / E. Quost’ (To Theo van Gogh / This painting that my friend Vincent loves so much / Best wishes / E. Quost). The painting disappeared from the family collection but was acquired in 1996 by the Vincent van Gogh Foundation (Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum). Ill. 2304 [2304]. See Van Gogh Museum Journal. Amsterdam and Zwolle 1996, p. 203.
[2304]