
From March 30 to September 7, 2025, the Museum of Wonderful Arts in Boston presents the exhibition “Van Gogh: The Roulin Household Portraits”
Supply: Museum of Wonderful Arts (MFA), Boston · Picture: Vincent van Gogh: “Postman Joseph Roulin” (element), 1888. Boston, MFA
Between 1888 and 1889 throughout his keep in Arles, within the south of France, Vincent van Gogh (1853–90) created quite a lot of portraits of a neighboring household—the postman Joseph Roulin; his spouse, Augustine and their three kids: Armand, Camille and Marcelle. Van Gogh’s tender relationship with the postman and his household, and his groundbreaking portrayals of them, are on the coronary heart of this exhibition, which is the primary devoted to the Roulin portraits and the deep bonds of friendship between the artist and this household.
Guests can see roughly 20 works by Van Gogh, together with the MFA’s iconic portraits Postman Joseph Roulin (1888) and Lullaby: Madame Augustine Roulin Rocking a Cradle (La Berceuse) (1889) in addition to necessary loans from museums such because the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, Museum of Fashionable Artwork in New York and Metropolitan Museum of Artwork. Moreover, key works of earlier Dutch artwork and Japanese woodblock prints—each of which profoundly knowledgeable Van Gogh’s portrait apply—together with new scientific findings present vital perception into components of the artist’s artistic course of, from his painterly contact to his selection of supplies. Letters written by Postman Roulin carry to life the deep bond of friendship and a significant turning level in Van Gogh’s life, as he moved to a brand new metropolis and grappled along with his psychological well being. He dreamed of making a vibrant neighborhood of artists in Arles, which led to a go to by fellow painter Paul Gauguin, whose work is included right here.
Regardless of imagining himself as a husband and father, Van Gogh by no means married or had kids. As he got here to phrases with this, he discovered consolation in his relationship with the Roulins; his portraits of them seize an intimacy that resonates throughout place and time in households of every kind—organic, chosen or noticed. This exhibition provides guests probably the most in-depth look but on the emotional underpinnings of among the beloved artist’s most well known work.