
The Sower III (version 2)
Vincent van Gogh·1888
Historical Context
The Sower III (version 2), painted in 1888 in Arles and now in the Van Gogh Museum, revisits a subject Van Gogh had explored repeatedly since his early Dutch period — the biblical parable of the sower and its secular counterpart in Millet's peasant paintings. In Arles, he transformed the sower into a Provençal subject, setting the figure against a blazing setting sun or wheat field lit by southern light. Van Gogh wrote extensively about the sower as a symbol: the agricultural act of casting seed onto earth connected to themes of faith, futility, and renewal that ran through his personal history. The yellow disk of the sun behind the sower in several versions gives the image an almost mystical intensity.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas with Van Gogh's characteristic Arles-period color intensity — the wheat field rendered in yellows and golds, the figure of the sower in dark silhouette against the glowing sky. His brushwork defines the furrows of the field in parallel strokes following the direction of plowing, organizing the ground plane into a dynamic pattern.
Look Closer
- ◆The enormous yellow sun disc dominates the upper quarter as a near-abstract chromatic force.
- ◆The sower's figure casts no shadow — Van Gogh choosing symbolic presence over naturalistic.
- ◆Short directional brushstrokes in the plowed field create furrows radiating outward from the figure.
- ◆The sky and field are held apart at the horizon only by a thin strip of complementary blue.




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