Vincent van Gogh artwork - Still Life - Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers. Vibrant sunflower painting to be found in the National Gallery, London.


Sometimes a work of art is so dazzlingly famous that it can blind people to its original context and meaning. That surely is the case with Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers. Take the version in London’s National Gallery that the Dutch artist painted in Arles in the South of France in August 1888. Fifteen sunflowers erupt out of a simple earthenware pot against a blazing yellow background. Some of the flowers are fresh and perky, ringed with halos of flickering, flame-like petals. Others are going to seed and have begun to droop. In part a meditation on the vagaries of time, the picture gives a dynamic, ferociously colourful twist to the long tradition of Dutch flower painting stretching back to the 17th Century. Since it entered the National Gallery’s collection in 1924, it has also proved phenomenally popular. Last year, more postcards of this painting were sold in the gallery’s shop – the exact figure was 26,110 – than of any other picture in the entire collection. Alastair Sooke.


Size: 4960px × 6202px
Location: National Gallery, London, England.
Photo credit: © steeve. e. flowers. / Alamy / Afripics
License: Royalty Free
Model Released: No

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