
Landscape Under a Stormy Sky
Vincent van Gogh·1888
Historical Context
Van Gogh painted stormy skies with increasing urgency as he developed his expressive language in Arles in 1888. A landscape under threatening weather gave him the opportunity to dramatize the tension between earth and sky that became central to his vision. Unlike traditional landscape painters who treated weather as atmosphere, Van Gogh used it as emotional notation — the turbulent clouds above the plain of the Camargue externalizing an inner state. This canvas belongs to the productive Arles period when he was painting at extraordinary intensity, filling his letters to Theo with descriptions of skies that seemed to speak directly to his condition.
Technical Analysis
Vigorous, swirling brushstrokes animate the storm clouds, contrasting with flatter, horizontal marks in the fields below. The palette combines blue-gray storm light with greens and yellows in the landscape. The composition emphasizes the expanse of sky over a low horizon, creating a sense of natural force pressing down.
Look Closer
- ◆The storm clouds are built from layered directional strokes creating an impression of violent.
- ◆The foreground vegetation bends in the same direction as the sky's movement — the wind made.
- ◆A strong diagonal from upper left to lower right organizes the composition's energy — the.
- ◆Van Gogh's typically warm palette is muted here — greens grey-tinged, the sky blue-grey rather.




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