Anna Boch Paintings


Anna Boch was a Belgian painter, born on February 10, 1848, in Saint-Vaast, Hainaut. She was part of an influential family, with her brother Eugène Boch also being an artist, known for being portrayed by Vincent van Gogh in the painting 'The Poet'. Anna Boch was associated with the Neo-Impressionist movement and was the only female member of the avant-garde group Les XX, a group of twenty Belgian painters, designers, and sculptors.

Boch's work encompassed a variety of subjects, including landscapes, seascapes, and rural scenes. Her style evolved over the years from a more traditional, academic approach to adopting the vibrant color and light characteristic of Impressionism. She was particularly influenced by the works of Impressionist artists such as Claude Monet and was one of the early European adopters of the pointillist technique pioneered by Georges Seurat.

Throughout her career, Anna Boch was an important patron of the arts. She supported many artists who were her contemporaries, including Vincent van Gogh, whom she admired greatly. In fact, she was the buyer of one of van Gogh's paintings, 'The Red Vineyard', which is the only painting known to have been sold by the artist during his lifetime.

Boch's artistic contributions were somewhat overshadowed by the achievements of her male counterparts during her lifetime, but she has gained more recognition in the years following her death. Anna Boch died on February 25, 1936, in Ixelles. Her legacy lives on not only through her own artworks but also through her generous support of other artists, which helped to shape the course of modern art at the turn of the 20th century.