
Allotment with Sunflower
Vincent van Gogh·1887
Historical Context
Van Gogh's Sunflowers series, painted in Arles in the summer of 1888, was created partly to decorate the Yellow House in anticipation of Gauguin's arrival. The choice of subject was deliberate — sunflowers were associated with gratitude and devotion, and their radiant yellow embodied Van Gogh's search for an art of emotional intensity and spiritual warmth. Gauguin called them his finest achievement. The series became among the most recognizable images in Western art The work's emotional directness and technical energy anticipate Expressionism by more than a decade and continue to resonate with viewers across generations.
Technical Analysis
Van Gogh's brushwork is intensely physical — thick impasto applied in swirling, directional strokes that give sky, earth, and figure equal energetic presence. His palette intensified dramatically after encountering Impressionism: vivid yellows, electric blues, and complementary orange-violet pairing




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