"Small Bottle with Peonies and Blue Delphiniums" Vincent Van Gogh Fine Art Print (29.5"x23.75")

Sale Price:$149.95 Original Price:$199.99
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This canvas wall print from Vincent Van Gogh comes framed and in great condition (see photos). The colors are vibrant and the canvas is well taken care of. Weight is 2lbs 14oz, with a depth of 1.5". Vincent Van Gogh painted this flower still life in Paris, June-July 1886, on a simple piece of card, using rapid, loose brushstrokes. It is one of many studies in which he experimented with the effects of different colours on each other. His brother Theo wrote to their mother: ‘He is mainly painting flowers, with the aim of making future pictures brighter in colour. Theo wrote that acquaintances were giving Van Gogh a bunch of flowers every week. This was one of the first bunches he painted; many more were to follow.

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This canvas wall print from Vincent Van Gogh comes framed and in great condition (see photos). The colors are vibrant and the canvas is well taken care of. Weight is 2lbs 14oz, with a depth of 1.5". Vincent Van Gogh painted this flower still life in Paris, June-July 1886, on a simple piece of card, using rapid, loose brushstrokes. It is one of many studies in which he experimented with the effects of different colours on each other. His brother Theo wrote to their mother: ‘He is mainly painting flowers, with the aim of making future pictures brighter in colour. Theo wrote that acquaintances were giving Van Gogh a bunch of flowers every week. This was one of the first bunches he painted; many more were to follow.

This canvas wall print from Vincent Van Gogh comes framed and in great condition (see photos). The colors are vibrant and the canvas is well taken care of. Weight is 2lbs 14oz, with a depth of 1.5". Vincent Van Gogh painted this flower still life in Paris, June-July 1886, on a simple piece of card, using rapid, loose brushstrokes. It is one of many studies in which he experimented with the effects of different colours on each other. His brother Theo wrote to their mother: ‘He is mainly painting flowers, with the aim of making future pictures brighter in colour. Theo wrote that acquaintances were giving Van Gogh a bunch of flowers every week. This was one of the first bunches he painted; many more were to follow.