Florida couple win battle to make their entire house look like van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’ van Gogh, florida, autistic, starry night ****** The painted exterior of Lubomir Jastrzebski and Nancy Nemhauser’s house in Mount Dora, Fla. (John Raoux/AP) The “Starry Night” mural that swallowed up the outer wall of their two-story house in a star-studded deep blue sky was supposed to be a gift to their son, now 25, who had a particular fascination with Vincent van Gogh. Nancy Nemhauser and her husband, Lubomir Jastrzebski, decided in 2017 to hire an artist to paint the mural after finding their son, who is autistic, constantly captivated by the painting. He had found it in a coffee-table book at their home in Mount Dora, Fla., Nemhauser said. At first, they only wanted to paint the five-foot wall that enclosed their front yard, but Nemhauser said they opted to paint their entire house after a code-enforcement officer said the wall needed to match the house. They knew their son would be even more thrilled. “We decided, well, there must be something to it,” Nemhauser told The Washington Post of their son’s love of “The Starry Night.” “Sure enough, when he was feeling tense, we would bring out the book, turn to the page where ‘Starry Night’ was, and it seemed to relax him. That’s how this started.” The mural soon attracted attention. People rang their doorbell asking to take pictures. Trolleys and Segway riders detoured down their street, slowing down to get a look. But not everybody liked the painting. In the eyes of a code-enforcement officer, the mural looked like a “juvenile-type painting of some sort,” as the officer told a magistrate, according to court documents. “I’m not into that type of artwork,” the code-enforcement officer allegedly said, arguing that the giant mural violated the city’s “sign” ordinance. A magistrate agreed, saying their house “attracts the attention of the public,” and ordered them to repaint it. For Nemhauser and Jastrzebski, what started as an art project intended to bring joy to their son instead brought them more than $10,000 in fines and fees for city-ordinance violations. It stretched into a year-long debate over the legality of cloaking one’s home in a famous painting. The couple refused to repaint their house, believing it would terribly upset their son, and instead took the case to federal court. They argued that the city’s sign ordinance was so overbroad in content restrictions that it violated their freedom of speech and that they were being selectively targeted in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Agreeing they were likely to prevail, a judge granted a temporary restraining order this year blocking the city from imposing any more of its $100-per-day fines. On Tuesday, however, Mayor Nick Girone announced that the city had reached an agreement with Nemhauser and Jastrzebski after reconsidering its position. The city of Mount Dora was required to publicly apologize — at a news conference — for the troubles it caused the couple and their son. Jastrzebski and Nemhauser at their home. (John Raoux/AP) The city will pay the couple $15,000 and remove th