A view of the garden of the asylum where I am
Garden of the Asylum
In May 1889, Van Gogh had himself admitted to the asylum of Saint-Paul de Mausole in Saint-Rémy (southern France), because he suffered from nervous attacks. He spent a year there. For the first few weeks, he could only work indoors or in the walled garden. After that, he was also allowed to work outside the grounds of the asylum. He painted the wheatfields, olive trees, cypresses and rocky landscape of the region.
Studio in the asylum
A view of the garden of the asylum where I am, on the right a grey terrace, a section of house, some rosebushes that have lost their flowers; on the left, the earth of the garden - red ochre - earth burnt by the sun, covered in fallen pine twigs.
Letter to Emile Bernard, Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, on or about Tuesday, 26 November 1889.