Van Gogh's last days in Auvers-sur-Oise : Immersive guided tour

Experience the painter’s ecstasy and despair as Vincent leads you through Auvers sur Oise, stage of his final days. Listen: he’ll tell you the secrets of his joy and sorrow of his art and life.
Private visits only
A discovery of Auvers-sur-Oise that leads you into the intimacy of the Master
Highlights
- Visit the church that inspired one of his most iconic works
- See the Ravoux Inn where he stayed and died, feverishly toiling at creating his final masterpieces
- Learn of Vincent’s mental suffering and the limits of the medicine of his time by the home of his doctor
- Delve into the mystery of the gunshot that killed the artist – did Vincent pull his own trigger, or not?
- Find answers of your own in contemplating the landscape of some of his last paintings
You will discover
This theatrical tour will guide you through Auvers-sur-Oise in the footprints of Van Gogh. Discover :
- The Église Notre-Dame-de-l ‘Assomption
- The Maison of Docteur Gachet
- The Parc Van Gogh
- The Auberge Ravoux
- The Champ de blé aux Corbeaux
Beware our street tour stays in the street and does not enter in the mentionned buildings.
Complete description
An actor-guide, as the tragic painter himself, will take you through the streets that saw his final days play out, thirty kilometers from Paris but a world away from the capital’s hubbub. His paintings will come to life for you, as will the artist himself in a tour of one of France’s best kept secrets, a tour unlike any other.
Located about thirty kilometers from Paris, discover the village of Auvers-sur-Oise, which was the final refuge of Vincent Van Gogh, a misunderstood genius who revolutionized the history of painting. Accompanied by Vincent Van Gogh himself, you will relive with emotions the painter’s last days there. Van Gogh settled in on May 20, 1890, at the Ravoux inn, and for 70 days, alternating between hope and anguish, he “threw himself into work” to forget his dark melancholy and not succumb to “his ailment.” It was during this time that 74 paintings and drawings were born from this fervor for life. Among them, many masterpieces.
Vincent will lead you into his unique pictorial imagination through the analysis of one of his masterpieces: the Church of Auvers-sur-Oise (now the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption). It is through this artistic gateway that you will delve into the mystery of Van Gogh. This mystery will gradually unfold as you stroll through Auvers-sur-Oise, where you will rediscover the streets, landscapes, and iconic locations that inspired Van Gogh’s final works.
Vincent will invite you to pause in the park that bears his name today, where several sculptures in his likeness stand, posthumous tributes from the sculptor Zadkine. Vincent will revisit the highlights of his life through the description of nine crucial dates that shaped his destiny and inspired his works.
The Auberge Ravoux will be the next stop on your stroll. This artists’ café will prove to be an emotionally charged place. It is here that Van Gogh stayed in Auvers-sur-Oise; it is also here that he died, in a modest room. Van Gogh will then present to you the last portrait he painted: that of Adeline Ravoux, daughter of the innkeeper.
What ailment afflicted Van Gogh? You will attempt to answer this question in front of Dr. Gachet’s house, a specialist in “melancholy.” You will be transported with horror at the mention of the various “treatments” inflicted on psychiatric patients in the 19th century, of which Van Gogh embodies the failure.
Finally, your journey to Auvers-sur-Oise will conclude with emotion around Van Gogh’s death. Who killed Vincent Van Gogh? Himself, society, something else? You will find elements of an answer by discovering his last painting: Wheat Field with Crows. It is facing the wheat field that inspired the painting that you will hear the last letter he wrote to his dear brother Theo. Your journey ends at the cemetery of Auvers-sur-Oise, a place of contemplation, where the two brothers rest in peace, forever united under a bed of ivy.
Included
- An immersive tour with a professionnal actor-guide
- Group limited to 15 people
Meeting point
Église Notre-Dame-de-l’Assomption d’Auvers-sur-Oise (Place de l’Eglise, 95430 Auvers-sur-Oise).
Access from Paris : Take RER C direction Pontoise, get down at St Ouen
l’Aumône station then take the train in direction of Creil and get down at the station
Auvers-sur-Oise
Alternatively : Train ligne H from Gare du Nord.
Cancellation policy
You may cancel up to 24 hours before the tour departure time and receive a full refund.
Important information
- Visit duration : 1h30
- Maximum 24h confirmation




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