Zoom Into Van Gogh's 'Terrace of a café at night'

Get up close with the iconic painting from the collection of The Kröller-Müller Museum

By Google Arts & Culture

Terrace of a café at night (Place du Forum) (c. 16 September 1888) by Vincent van GoghKröller-Müller Museum

Vincent van Gogh's 'Terrace of a Cafe at Night' (1888) is among the most recognizable paintings in history. Its atmospheric palette, and the contrast between the quiet nighttime cobbles and the compelling bustle of the people, have endeared it to generations of viewers.

Van Gogh had intended to make a nocturnal painting for some time. And not one in the conventional manner, in shades of black and grey, but actually with an abundance of colours.

Equally unconventional is that he paints this gas-lit terrace of a café in Arles in situ and in the dark, because colours have a different appearance during the day than by night.

The most eye-catching aspect is the sharp contrast between the warm yellow, green and orange colours under the marquise and the deep blue of the starry sky, which is reinforced by the dark blue of the houses in the background. Van Gogh was pleased with the effect: ‘I believe that an abundance of gaslight, which, after all, is yellow and orange, intensifies blue.’

He writes to his sister Wil: ‘I enormously enjoy painting on the spot at night.’ The fact that he observes keenly is borne out by later astronomical research. He painted the constellations precisely as they appeared on the night of 16 or 17 September 1888.

Want to explore some more? Step through the frame and take a Street View tour of Van Gogh's Europe

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