Andrew Martin National Gallery Van Gogh's Sunflowers Cushion

John Lewis £44.50 £62.30 Might be Out of Stock First seen in Dec 2016
Description
Elevate your interior by incorporating decorative accessories steeped in artistic and cultural interest. From Andrew Martin's National Gallery-licensed cushion collection, this stunning design features Van Gogh's Sunflowers painting, offset with an attractive piped edge. This is one of four paintings of sunflowers dating from August and September 1888. Van Gogh intended to decorate Gauguin's room with these paintings in the so-called Yellow House that he rented in Arles in the South of France. He and Gauguin worked there together between October and December 1888. The dying flowers are built up with thick brushstrokes (impasto). The impasto evokes the texture of the seed-heads. Van Gogh produced a replica of this painting in January 1889, and perhaps another one later in the year. The various versions and replicas remain much debated among Van Gogh scholars. The spectacularly colourful setting of the sun draws a parallel with the passing of the old warship. By contrast the new steam-powered tug is smaller and more prosaic. Turner was in his sixties when he painted 'The Fighting Temeraire'. It shows his mastery of painting techniques to suggest sea and sky. Paint laid on thickly is used to render the sun's rays striking the clouds. By contrast, the ship's rigging is meticulously painted.
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