The painting depicts a slightly abstracted, richly coloured landscape with a centrally placed house, surrounded by fields and individual trees. The perspective is slightly elevated, providing an overview of the gently undulating natural forms.
The house is rendered in calm, earthy tones, with a red roof that creates a warm colour contrast to the cool blues and greens of the surroundings. The fields are shown in varied blocks of colour—from lush blues and greens to warm reds and yellows—given a lively texture through bold brushstrokes.
The trees frame the scene, yet they are not true to nature; instead, they are stylised and painted in pastel colours that lend the image a dreamlike, almost poetic atmosphere. The flowing lines and harmonious colour composition create a calm, meditative mood in which nature and architecture merge.
The composition reflects Evard’s interest in combining geometric clarity with emotionally expressive colour, which are characteristic features of his work in this phase. The landscape thus appears not merely as a depiction of reality, but as an artistically interpreted space full of both vitality and stillness.