Bring the radiant warmth of the South of France into your home with this art print of Wheat Harvest in Provence by Vincent van Gogh, one of his most vibrant landscapes, created during his Arles period. This painting celebrates the cycles of nature, the light of the Midi, and the beauty of the simple gestures of rural life.
Under a blue sky swept with clouds, the scene shows wheat fields as far as the eye can see, where golden colors ripple in the wind. In the foreground, a farmer is busy harvesting, bringing to life this sea of wheat that Van Gogh expresses through his nervous, powerful, and expressive strokes. In the background, bluish hills and a farmhouse blend into the peaceful horizon.
Created in 1888, during his stay in Arles, this work marks one of the peaks of Van Gogh's painting. Fascinated by the contrasts of intense colors, the harsh light of Provence and the scenes of peasant life, he paints what moves him deeply: the connection between man and the earth.
Van Gogh himself describes this harvest as an allegory of human life, where each season has its meaning, its beauty, its end. This work is a sincere and vibrant testimony of his poetic view of the rural world.
Bring the radiant warmth of the South of France into your home with this art print of Wheat Harvest in Provence by Vincent van Gogh, one of his most vibrant landscapes, created during his Arles period. This painting celebrates the cycles of nature, the light of the Midi, and the beauty of the simple gestures of rural life.
Under a blue sky swept with clouds, the scene shows wheat fields as far as the eye can see, where golden colors ripple in the wind. In the foreground, a farmer is busy harvesting, bringing to life this sea of wheat that Van Gogh expresses through his nervous, powerful, and expressive strokes. In the background, bluish hills and a farmhouse blend into the peaceful horizon.
Created in 1888, during his stay in Arles, this work marks one of the peaks of Van Gogh's painting. Fascinated by the contrasts of intense colors, the harsh light of Provence and the scenes of peasant life, he paints what moves him deeply: the connection between man and the earth.
Van Gogh himself describes this harvest as an allegory of human life, where each season has its meaning, its beauty, its end. This work is a sincere and vibrant testimony of his poetic view of the rural world.