15. As a result of the efforts of
Camille Corot,
Honoré Daumier was in a position to buy a house in Valmondois, near Auvers-sur-Oise, in February 1874. Through his friend Bardon, Corot had raised more than half of the 13,000 francs needed. This generous act was common knowledge thanks to reports in the press – for instance it was mentioned in Daumier’s obituary in
La Révolution Française in 1879 – and by way of
Causeries sur les artistes de mon temps by
Jean Gigoux, which Van Gogh had read. Gigoux wrote: ‘Good old Daumier! He was unable to hide how he was living. Towards the end, as he was almost blind, and so poor that he could not longer pay his rent in the country, Corot, good Corot, heard about it: and so he bought the house and brought him the bill of sale on his saint’s day’. (Ce brave Daumier! Il ne sut pas abriter sa vie. Vers la fin, comme il était presque aveugle, et si pauvre, qu’il ne pouvait plus payer son loyer à la campagne, Corot, le bon Corot, eut vent de cela: alors, il acheta la maison et lui porta l’acte de vente le jour de sa fête) (see Gigoux 1885, p. 55). We do not know whether Van Gogh was familiar with the book
Honoré Daumier: l’homme et l’oeuvre (1888) by
Arsène Alexandre (at any rate Theo had bought it in May). Alexandre mentions the story on p. 334. Cf. also Dumesnil 1875, p. 90 and Dorn 1990, p. 231 (n. 26).