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Peach Tree in Blossom
Vincent Van Gogh
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| Spring happens here slowly, flower by flower, branch by branch — and the peach tree stands in the middle of that silence as if surprised by its own blossoming. Van Gogh painted it in Arles in early spring 1888, captivated by the Provençal orchard that seemed to defy everything he had known from the grey northern skies. He does not look at the tree like a botanist or a gardener — he sees in it structure, tension, rhythm, and transfers all of this onto the canvas with a precision that has nothing to do with literalism. The background pulses with cold blues, lush greens, and golden accents, vibrating like a rain-soaked meadow. The colour contrasts do not unsettle — they create a taut harmony in which the tree stands as the quiet hero: fragile yet unshaken. The paint surface is thick and almost sculptural, every impasto stroke seeming to breathe with its own energy. This is more than a botanical study — it is a declaration of faith in renewal. Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo that the blossoming orchards of Arles filled him with a joy he had long forgotten. The Provençal spring was for Van Gogh something more than a change of season — it was proof that the world is capable of starting over, and this tree is the finest proof of that. The painting belongs to Van Gogh's celebrated series of Arles orchards, created in spring 1888 — just weeks after his arrival in Provence. The series was dedicated to the memory of the painter Anton Mauve, his cousin's husband, who had just died. It is one of the most lyrical chapters in the artist's entire oeuvre. The work is held in the collection of the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo, the Netherlands. |
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DETAILS Title: Peach Tree in Blossom Original title: Perzikboom in bloei Artist: Vincent Van Gogh Date: 1888 Place of origin: Arles, France Type : Painting Technique: Oil on canvas Genre: Landscape Style: Post-Impressionism Form: Painting |
Vincent Van Gogh - Peach Tree in Blossom
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