2 hours
Daily Tour
Unlimited
English
As dawn breaks over Auvers-sur-Oise, the village awakens with the same golden light that once inspired Vincent van Gogh’s final masterpieces. Just 30 kilometres from Paris, this peaceful place feels frozen in time, its rooftops glowing amber and fields shimmering with morning dewechoes of the world Van Gogh saw and painted so passionately.
Begin your journey at the Auberge Ravoux, where Van Gogh spent his final weeks. His small attic room, preserved as it was in 1890, still hums with the urgency of a man creating a painting nearly every day. From there, follow the Van Gogh Trail through cobbled lanes and painted scenes brought to life: the tricoloured Town Hall, shuttered cottages, and the home of Dr. Gachet, the artist’s friend and physician.
The Church of Auvers rises just as it did in his swirling, emotional painting. Stand before it and feel the energy that turned stone and shadow into art. Then continue toward the vast wheat fieldssilent, golden, and endless. These are the landscapes of Vincent’s final days, filled with both beauty and sorrow, hope and storm.
End at the quiet cemetery, where Vincent and Theo rest side by side beneath a shared veil of ivy. The moment is hushed, profound.
This walk is more than a visit, it’s a rare chance to step inside Van Gogh’s world. Come now, before modern life fades this timeless tribute to one of history’s most powerful artistic voices.
This hidden lane, lined with quaint cottages and gardens, feels like a scene from Van Gogh’s Houses at Auvers, blending nature and architecture in a tranquil, painterly moment.
Rue de l'Église, with its quiet charm and sloping rooftops, echoes Van Gogh’s White House at Night, where a glowing window and starlit sky bring a simple village scene to emotional life.
Rue de l'Église and Rue Daubigny unfold like pages from Van Gogh’s sketchbooklined with quiet homes, slate rooftops, and soft façades that echo the mood.
A quaint stone staircase winds left, echoing Van Gogh’s gaze. Climb upward toward the Church of Auvers, where each step brings you closer to the scene that inspired one of his final masterpieces.
Église Notre-Dame d'Auvers stands just as Van Gogh painted it weathered stone, soft light, and quiet paths capturing the timeless, rustic beauty that defined his final creative days.
Turn right onto Rue du Général de Gaulle, where quiet charm and rustic façades echo Van Gogh’s brush strokes, step drawing you deeper into the painter’s vibrant vision of village life.
Stroll down Rue du Général de Gaulle, where every shuttered home and blooming garden whispers the inspiration Van Gogh once found in the quiet corners of this timeless French village.
Parc Van Gogh is a peaceful, tree-lined retreat in Auvers-sur-Oise, honouring Vincent’s arrival in 1890 as he sought calm after a year in the asylumserenity echoing through every shaded path.
Place de la Mairie is Auvers-sur-Oise’s civic heart, with a stately stone town hall, fluttering French flags, and timeless charm that reflect the village’s elegance and quiet pride.
The Auberge Ravoux, Van Gogh’s final home, offers a moving glimpse into his last days. Visit Room No. 5 and dine in the restored inn where he once shared quiet meals
L'Escalier d’Auvers, where Van Gogh painted daily village life in 1890, captures stone steps, red-roofed homes, and local figures in vivid brushstrokes beneath a bright blue sky.
At Racines de Van Gogh, a sloped embankment on Rue Daubigny, Van Gogh painted his final, haunting work Tree Roots tangle of exposed roots symbolising struggle, chaos, and raw emotion.
Square de la Résistance is a peaceful park in Auvers with a moving war memorial at its heart, honouring local lives lost in the World Wars amid greenery and quiet reflection.
Continue along D928 as it becomes Rue de Zunder, a gentle stretch lined with village homes and greenery, leading you toward the quieter edges of Auvers where Van Gogh once wandered in thought.
Walk the same path Van Gogh once took in 1890, seeking calm and care from Dr. Gacheta physician and artist who understood the delicate balance between creativity and emotional pain.
Maison du Docteur Gachet is a peaceful, ivy-covered retreat where Van Gogh found brief solace, an intimate space of healing, art, and friendship nestled along a quiet, tree-lined lane.
In 1880, Van Gogh found joy and purpose in becoming an artist, writing to Theo, “I’m possessed by an irresistible passion for drawing.” It was a turning point that lit his path forward.
The Château d’Auvers is a grand 17th-century estate overlooking Auvers, with terraced gardens and sweeping views that once inspired Van Gogh’s landscapes.
Stroll down Rue de Léry, a quiet, leafy lane lined with stone houses and climbing vinesechoing the same peaceful charm Van Gogh once experienced on his walks through the village.
Walk along Rue Alphonse Callé and spot number 44 on your left the Musée de l’Absinthe, a small museum dedicated to the mysterious “green fairy” that once inspired and unsettled 19th-century artists.
Welcome to the Musée de l’Absinthea quirky stop where you’ll uncover how this potent green spirit bewitched 19th-century artists, fueling both creativity and controversy in bohemian France.
Step into the open fields beyond Auversgolden, quiet, and vast. This is the land that calmed Van Gogh’s restless spirit and inspired his final, powerful works.
Stroll past Atelier-Daubigny, home of landscape pioneer Charles-François Daubigny, whose plein air style helped shape Impressionism and deeply influenced artists like Monet and Van Gogh.
Turn onto Sente du Montier, a narrow, rising path lined with wild grasses and blooms like stepping into a living painting brushed with soft strokes of green, gold, and violet.
Walk through golden fields beneath a vast, quiet skyVan Gogh’s final landscape, untouched and eternal, where beauty and sorrow linger in the breeze and silence tells the story.
At Auvers' edge, step into Van Gogh’s worldgolden wheat, open skies, and a quiet path merge canvas with reality. Here, you don’t just see his art, you walk inside it.
Van Gogh’s Landscape at Auvers in the Rain veils golden fields in stormy blues, with sweeping strokes capturing the weight of rain and emotion in his final days.
The Auvers-sur-Oise Cemetery is a peaceful, modest resting place where quiet rows of old headstones lead you to the ivy-covered graves of Vincent and Theo van Gogh.
In Auvers-sur-Oise’s quiet cemetery, Van Gogh’s simple pale gravestone rests among fields he once painted, inscribed with: “Ici repose Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890).”
As you near the train station, glimpse Van Gogh’s View of Auvers rooftops, orchards, and church rising gently the same timeless scene he painted in his final weeks.
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