Description
From an Original Color Painting
This is a reproduction of a painting titled "Garden at Arles" (also known as Flowering Garden with a Path, Arles or The Garden with Flowers) by the Dutch Post-Impressionist artist Vincent van Gogh.
Painting Details
Artist: Vincent van Gogh
Title: Flowering Garden with a Path, Arles
Year: July 1888
Medium: Oil on canvas
Location: The main version is housed in the Kunstmuseum Den Haag (The Hague, Netherlands). Other versions of the garden were created, including one at the Hermitage Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago.
About the Artwork
Period: Van Gogh painted this work during his highly productive period in Arles, France, where he was inspired by the intense light and vivid colors of the southern French landscape.
Style: The painting features the artist's characteristic vigorous and thick brushstrokes (impasto), transforming a natural scene into a vibrant and emotional tapestry of color and energy.
Subject: Van Gogh described the garden to his brother Theo, capturing the "orange, yellow, red patches of flowers" that possessed an "amazing brilliance" under the Southern sun. He saw gardens not just as landscapes, but as metaphors for human emotion and a place of peace and renewal.
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This is a reproduction of a painting titled "Garden at Arles" (also known as Flowering Garden with a Path, Arles or The Garden with Flowers) by the Dutch Post-Impressionist artist Vincent van Gogh.
Painting Details
Artist: Vincent van Gogh
Title: Flowering Garden with a Path, Arles
Year: July 1888
Medium: Oil on canvas
Location: The main version is housed in the Kunstmuseum Den Haag (The Hague, Netherlands). Other versions of the garden were created, including one at the Hermitage Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago.
About the Artwork
Period: Van Gogh painted this work during his highly productive period in Arles, France, where he was inspired by the intense light and vivid colors of the southern French landscape.
Style: The painting features the artist's characteristic vigorous and thick brushstrokes (impasto), transforming a natural scene into a vibrant and emotional tapestry of color and energy.
Subject: Van Gogh described the garden to his brother Theo, capturing the "orange, yellow, red patches of flowers" that possessed an "amazing brilliance" under the Southern sun. He saw gardens not just as landscapes, but as metaphors for human emotion and a place of peace and renewal.