Daisies, Arles

Vincent van Gogh
Artist Vincent van Gogh
Date 1888
Medium Oil on canvas
Collection Van Gogh Museum
Copyright Public domain. Free for personal & commercial use.

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About the Artist

Vincent van Gogh
Dutch (1853–1890)
Dutch post-Impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh, born in Zundert, Netherlands, revolutionized modern art with his emotive brushwork and vivid color palettes. Despite a turbulent life marked by mental illness and poverty, he produced over 2,000 artworks, including masterpieces like The Starry Night and Sunflowers. His career began in earnest at age 27 after abandoning earlier pursuits in art dealing and religious ministry. Van Gogh’s work, initially dismissed as chaotic, later became foundational to Expressionism and Fauvism. He died by suicide at 37, leaving a legacy that reshaped 20th-century art.

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HEX color palette extracted from Daisies, Arles (1888)-palette by Vincent van Gogh
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Artwork Story

Vincent van Gogh’s ‘Daisies, Arles’ bursts with the raw energy of nature, its thick, swirling brushstrokes capturing wildflowers in a frenzy of movement. The daisies seem to tremble under the Provençal sun, their white petals glowing against a backdrop of lush greens and earthy browns. Van Gogh painted this during his time in Arles, where the vibrant light and rural landscapes fueled his creativity. There’s something almost rebellious in the way the flowers tilt and lean, as if refusing to be tamed by the frame. The painting feels alive, a fleeting moment of beauty snatched from the chaos of growth and decay.

What makes this piece so captivating is its simplicity—just a cluster of daisies, yet charged with emotion. Van Gogh’s signature impasto technique gives the flowers texture, making them almost tangible. You can almost feel the wind rustling through them, smell the damp earth beneath. It’s not just a still life; it’s a celebration of the ordinary, transformed by his restless vision. The composition is loose, almost improvisational, yet every stroke feels deliberate, a dance between control and abandon. This isn’t a polished botanical study—it’s a love letter to the wild, untamed heart of nature.

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