The Letter From Vincent van Gogh to Theo_645

Letter 645 Auvers-sur-Oise, 28 June 1890

My dear Theo,

You should send the enclosed order for paints at the beginning of the month, anyway at the most convenient time,

there is no hurry, a few days sooner or later don’t matter.

Yesterday and the day before I painted Mlle. Gachet’s portrait, which I hope you will see soon; the dress is pink, the wall in the background green with orange spots, the carpet red with green spots, the piano dark violet; it is 40 inches high by 20 inches wide [F 772, JH 2048].

It is a figure that I enjoyed painting �but it is difficult. He has promised to make her pose for me another time at the small organ. I will do one for you �I have noticed that this canvas goes very well with another horizontal one of wheat, as one canvas is vertical and in pink tones, the other pale green and greenish yellow, the complementary of pink; but we are still far from the time when people will understand the curious relation between one fragment of nature and another, which all the same explain each other and enhance each other. But some certainly feel it, and that’s something.

And then there is this improvement, that in clothes you see combinations of very pretty light colours; if you could make the people you are walking past pose and do their portraits, it would be as pretty as any period whatever in the past, and I even think that often in nature there is actually all the grace of a picture by Puvis, between art and nature.

For instance, yesterday I saw two figures: the mother in a gown of deep carmine, the daughter in pale pink with a yellow hat without any ornament, very healthy country faces, browned by fresh air, burned by the sun; the mother especially had a very, very red face and black hair and two diamonds in her ears. And I thought again of that canvas by Delacroix, “L’Éducation Maternelle.�For in the expression of the faces there was really everything that there was in the head of George Sand. Do you know that there is a portrait �“Bust of George Sand��by Delacroix, there is a wood engraving of it in L’Illustration, with short hair.

A good handshake in thought for you and Jo and good luck with the little one.

Ever yours, Vincent