Harman Patil (Editor)

Drawbridge in Nieuw Amsterdam

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Year
  
1883

Artist
  
Vincent van Gogh

Period
  
Realism

Type
  
Watercolor

Created
  
1883

Drawbridge in Nieuw-Amsterdam wwwvincentvangoghgalleryorgdownload168175D

Location
  
Groninger Museum, Groninger, Netherlands

Similar
  
Marsh with Water Lilies, Meadows near Rijswijk a, Interior of a Restaurant in Arles, Old Vineyard with Peas, Still Life with Straw Hat

Drawbridge in Nieuw-Amsterdam is a watercolor created in November, 1883 by Vincent van Gogh in Drente, The Netherlands.

Watercolor painting

Van Gogh wrote to his brother, Theo of the view outside his room in Nieuw-Amsterdam, Drenthe: "I now have a reasonably large room where a stove has been placed, where there happens to be a small balcony. From which I can even see the heath with the huts. I also look out on a very curious drawbridge." Within the letter he drew a sketch of the bridge, which became the watercolor, Drawbridge in Nieuw-Amsterdam.

The work was one of 148 watercolors made by Van Gogh, who said of working in that medium in 1881:

What a splendid thing watercolour is to express atmosphere and distance,
so that the figure is surrounded by air and can breathe in it, as it were.

Five years after having made this work, van Gogh made Langlois Bridge at Arles in France which captures a lighter mood.

References

Drawbridge in Nieuw-Amsterdam Wikipedia