Wheat Fields with Cypresses by Vincent Van Gogh (London Version)

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Wheat Fields with Cypresses by Vincent Van Gogh (London Version)

Painting NameWheat Fields with Cypresses
Painter NameVincent Van Gogh
Completion Date1889
Place of CreationFrance
Size72.1 cm × 90.9 cm (28.4 in × 35.8 in)
TechniqueOil
MaterialCanvas
Current LocationThe National Gallery London

This painting is a part of the series Cypresses by Van Gogh produced in 1889-1890. The represented one is the most popular as it got famed in 1993 after its sell to Walter H. Annenberg for an equivalent amount of $ 86.3 million. It is considered as the artist one of the masterpieces.

Though, if one takes a closer look at the painting, he learns that the depiction is more related to his fantasy than the reality as if he just watched the real scene and then depicted it in his own style of broken brush and post-impressionist vivid colors. This portrayal from his last days has filled with vibrant and close to original colors as he accepted the post-impressionism.

Van Gogh’s prominent works has been produced in his later times, mostly after he got admitted in the hospital of Arles in 1888 and 1889. This one is from the same time produced in 1889 with oil on canvas. Van Gogh didn’t have much choice about the subjects to get inspire from in the hospital and was left to choose between the scenery around the hospital, his memories of the old times including the peasants and his old unfinished works.


Van Gogh was an artist who never allowed his art to be bound by the artistic limits. As we can see here, he merely described realism and depicted an imaginary scene based on the real one. From the style of his brushstrokes to the weird selection of colors over reality, his paintings have become inspirations to many artists in modern world. An American painter Stefan Duncan got so much impressed by Van Gogh that he grasped the artist’s style solely and produced the similar works and is on his way to become America’s Vincent van Gogh. And this is just one example.

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3 Responses to “Wheat Fields with Cypresses by Vincent Van Gogh (London Version)”
  1. Stefan duncan

    Thank you for mentioning. It’s been the greatest honor to be noted as America’s Van Gogh. Would be happy to talk about painting in any of your articles.

    • admin

      Thank you. That would be great. We will get back to you through an email.

  2. duncan1745@Yahoo.com

    OMG, I JUST HAD ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT REVELATIONS AND DISCOVERIES OF MY LIFE. I had never read this until about 15 minutes ago. Oh, MY,GOD.. .I just found this excerpt from the Van Gogh Gallery, a prediction Van Gogh made. About a year before his death Van Gogh predicted that there would be a great “painter of the future” who would know how to use color like no one else and would become the future of painting. He expressed this in a letter to his brother Theo in May of 1888. Van Gogh firmly believed that to be a great painter you had to first master drawing before adding color. Over the years Van Gogh clearly mastered drawing and began to use more color. In time, one of the most recognizable aspects of Van Gogh’s paintings became his bold use of color. This is evident in both Van Gogh’s landscapes and his still life paintings

    About a year before his death Van Gogh predicted that there would be a great “painter of the future” who would know how to use color like no one else and would become the future of painting. He expressed this in a letter to his brother Theo in May of 1888,

    “As for me, I shall go on working, and here and there something of my work will prove of lasting value – but who will there be to achieve for figure painting what Claude Monet has achieved for landscape? However, you must feel, as I do, that someone like that is on the way – Rodin? – he does not use colour – it won’t be him. But the painter of the future will be a colourist the like of which has never yet been seen.

    (I created the new art form called Squiggleism, of which I do not blend my colors, but apply them pure in a staggered, flowing way. When you stand back, your eyes help with the blending. Meanwhile the colors really pop and are so vibrant because they are not muted by contamination of other colors. I often place complementary colors together to really make them pop. Wow, tonight has been a REVELATION FOR ME. The Van Gogh Gallery calls me the “American Van Gogh. I FEEL WITH ALL MY HEART AND SOUL VAN GOGH WAS TALKING ABOUT ME. )

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