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Season of mists and mellow artfulness

Country Life UK

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October 04, 2023

Vincent van Gogh painted it as olive trees buffeted by the wind, Claude Monet as frothing orange leaves, David Hockney as a triumph of woodland colours. Michael Prodger explores how autumn's many beauties have long inspired artists

- Michael Prodger

Season of mists and mellow artfulness

FOR Vincent van Gogh, autumn was the most beguiling and poetic of seasons. ‘As long as autumn lasts,’ he wrote, ‘I shall not have hands, canvas and colours enough to paint the beautiful things I see.’ Here was the chance to use a myriad of rich tones, to fill skies with the drama of clouds and lay down in paint the sense of change in the air.

Autumn was a subject van Gogh turned to again and again. Avenue of Poplars in Autumn (1884), Autumn Landscape with Four Trees (1885), Autumn Landscape at Dusk (1885), Les Alyscamps (1888) and Falling Autumn Leaves (1888)—the season had a hold on him. And in 1889, between October and December, at the asylum near Saint Rémy where he was recovering from the breakdown heralded by the self-mutilation of his ear, it hadn’t let go. There, he depicted olive trees buffeted by the wind and painted over a fizzing picture of a flowering hillside with an image of a grey and green ravine instead. His colours, still rich, had darkened and the mood, for all the tossing and turning brushstrokes, was sombre. There was a chill in the air. Van Gogh sensed, it seems, that he was painting the autumn of his own life. The following summer, he killed himself.

Van Gogh was far from the first artist to find something elegiac in the season. More than three centuries earlier, Pieter Bruegel the Elder painted 

MEER VERHALEN VAN Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

A view through the woods

THIS superb book is not, as the title might suggest, a straightforward natural history of Russia’s dominant biome, which, as its author reminds us, is equal in importance and far greater in extent than the Amazonian rainforest.

time to read

6 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

The tragedy then the triumph

Verdi's dramatic operas are among the most popular, but grief nearly halted his output and the Italian composer and countryman only returned to creativity after finding solace on his farm

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Take a leaf

Add charm to winter months with jewellery inspired by Nature

time to read

1 min

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Big Brother and the badgers

I ONCE spent several miserable hours up a tree waiting for some badgers to emerge from their sett.

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Does culture have pride of place?

AS Athena went to press, the Government announced a package of $1.5 billion capital spending ‘to restore national pride’.

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

An inspector calls

AGROMENES has a new hero.

time to read

2 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

A study in scarlet

One hundred years ago, the first all-red telephone box, designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, was installed in London. Deborah Nicholls-Lee lifts the receiver on a very British icon

time to read

5 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Having a wild time

BACK in 1994, I made a big mistake when I decided not to attend a conference titled Perennial Perspectives at Kew.

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Offaly good

Forget fillet and pass on plastic-wrapped cuts: taking a nose-to-tail approach to dining offers the ultimate in magnificent, fully immersive eating, advocates

time to read

5 mins

January 28, 2026

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

A ghost in the gloaming

The spectral emergence of a barn owl, silently drifting across the sky at dusk, is one of Britain's most magical sights. We must treasure their dwindling numbers

time to read

3 mins

January 28, 2026

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