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Anthonij (Anton) Rudolf Mauve (18 September 1838, Zaandam, North Holland – 5 February 1888, Arnhem) was a Dutch realist painter who was a leading member of the Hague School. He signed his paintings 'A. Mauve' or with a monogrammed 'A.M.'. He was a very significant early influence on his cousin-in-law Vincent van Gogh.

Self-portrait

Grazing Sheep

Interior of a Barn

Resting Cows

The Cowherdess

Watching The Flock

Most of Mauve's work depicts people and animals in outdoor settings. In his Morning Ride in the Rijksmuseum, for example, fashionable equestrians at the seacoast are seen riding away from the viewer. An unconventional detail, horse droppings in the foreground, attests his commitment to realism. His best known paintings depict peasants working in the fields and especially sheep herding scenes. His paintings of flocks of sheep were especially popular with American patrons.


Life and work
a group of well dressed equestrians, the lady riding sidesaddle, descend at a leisurly pace from the dunes to the beach at Scheveningen towards the bathing huts, their horses leaving droppings in the sand
Morning Ride on the Beach (1876),oil on canvas,Rijksmuseum

Anton Mauve was born on 18 September 1838 in Zaandam, a town in the Dutch province of North Holland. A year after his birth his father, a Mennonite chaplain, was sent to Haarlem, the capital city of the province, where Mauve grew up.

He was apprenticed to the painter Pieter Frederik van Os followed by Wouter Verschuur. In his further development he worked with Paul Gabriël, painting from nature, and they regularly stayed and worked together at Oosterbeek, the 'Dutch Barbizon'.

In 1872 Mauve settled in The Hague where he became a leading member of the Hague School of painters inspired by the French Barbizon School in turn by the work of John Constable.

In the last two years of his life Mauve settled in the village of Laren in the region surrounding Hilversum called het Gooi. The group of painters who settled there, including Jozef Israëls and Albert Neuhuys, came to be known collectively as the Larense School and the region around het Gooi was dubbed 'Mauve land' as far afield as the United States.

Mauve died suddenly in Arnhem on 5 February 1888.

Relationship with Vincent Van Gogh
"a dug-over patch of ground in an orchard, a wicker fence and two peach trees in full bloom, pink against a sparkling blue sky with white clouds and in sunshine" [Van Gogh letter 590 VGM] to the bottom left there is an inscription 'souvenir de Mauve'
Vincent van Gogh, Souvenir de Mauve (circa 30 March 1888), oil on canvas, Kröller-Müller Museum

Mauve was married to Vincent's cousin Ariëtte (Jet) Sophia Jeannette Carbentus [1] and was a major influence on van Gogh. He is mentioned directly in 152 of Vincent's surviving letters. A comparative table of number of letters mentioning his most significant influences is shown below.
Artist Letters
Millet 170
Mauve 152
Rembrandt 100
Delacroix 93

Vincent spent three weeks at Mauve's studio at the end of 1881 and during that time he made his first experiments in painting under Mauve's tutelage, first in oils and then early the next year in watercolour (previously he had concentrated on drawing). Mauve continued to encourage him and lent him money to rent and furnish a studio [2] but later grew cold towards him and did not return a number of letters.[3]

In a letter to his brother Theo van Gogh dated 7 May 1882 [4] Vincent describes "a very regrettable conversation" in which Mauve told him their association was "over and done with" adding by way of explanation that Vincent had a vicious character. Vincent continued his letter by expressing his sorrow and then defiantly launches into a defence of his relationship with Clasina (Sien) Maria Hoornik, a pregnant prostitute he had befriended.

"People suspect me of something... it’s in the air... I must be hiding something... Vincent is keeping something back that may not be divulged.. Well, gentlemen, I’ll tell you – you who set great store by manners and culture, and rightly so, provided it’s the real thing – what is more cultured, more sensitive, more manly: to forsake a woman or to take on a forsaken one?"

* (cf. Sorrow (1882), Lithograph, Private collection)

The reality was that they were lovers. The presumption must be that Mauve had heard of the relationship (although Vincent's letter does not say so expressly) and broke off the association because of it. Nevertheless Vincent continued to hold Mauve in very high esteem and dedicated one of his most iconic paintings to Mauve's memory after hearing of his sudden death.

"Now here, for instance, at this moment, I have 6 paintings of blossoming fruit trees. And the one I brought home today would possibly appeal to you — it’s a dug-over patch of ground in an orchard, a wicker fence and two peach trees in full bloom, pink against a sparkling blue sky with white clouds and in sunshine. You may well see it, since I’ve decided to send this one to Jet Mauve. I’ve written on it 'Souvenir de Mauve Vincent & Theo'." [5]

Mauve's mother Elisabeth Margaretha Hirschig was a first cousin twice removed of Anton Hirschig, the young Dutch artist who was a fellow lodger with Vincent at the Auberge Ravoux at the time of Vincent's death.

Selected works

* Entering the Fold (circa 1885-8), drawing and watercolour, Tate Gallery
* Milking Time (circa 1875), oil on canvas, National Gallery
* Landscape with cattle, chalk on paper, Courtauld Institute
* Shepherdess, oil on canvas, Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum of Wales
* Morning Ride (1876), oil on canvas, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
* Rider in the Snow (1879), watercolour and gouache, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
* De Torenlaan te Laren (1886), oil on canvas, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
* Ariëtte Carbentus, wife of the artist, sitting in the dunes (circa 1876), oil on canvas, Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie, The Hague (private collection)
* Gathering Seaweed, oil on canvas, Musée d'Orsay, Paris
* Changing Pasture (circa 1880s), oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
* Return of the Flock, Laren (circa 1186 -1887), oil on canvas, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
* Digging up a Tree, watercolor, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
* Returning Home, oil on wood, Art Gallery of New South Wales


Bibliography

* Dorn, Roland, Schröder, Klaus Albrecht & Sillevis, John, ed.: Van Gogh und die Haager Schule (exh. cat. Kunstforum, Wien 1996), Skira, Milan 1996 ISBN 88-8118-072-3
* Tralbaut, Marc Edo. Vincent van Gogh, le mal aimé. Edita, Lausanne (French) & Macmillan, London 1969 (English); reissued by Macmillan, 1974 and by Alpine Fine Art Collections, 1981. ISBN 0-933516-31-2.


References

1. ^ Family tree of Vincent Van Gogh
2. ^ "Letter 196". Vincent van Gogh. The Letters. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum. http://vangoghletters.org/vg/letters/let196/letter.html.
3. ^ Tralbaut (1981), 96–103
4. ^ "Letter 224". Vincent van Gogh. The Letters. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum. http://www.vangoghletters.org/vg/letters/let224/letter.html.
5. ^ "Search result". Vincent van Gogh. The Letters. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum.

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