Edmund Dulac’s Tanglewood Tales: Jason Choosing Tiphys for the Voyage of the Argo Edmund Dulac’s illustration...
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About the Artwork
Corn Harvest in Provence (also known as Wheat Field with a Reaper, 1889) was painted by Van Gogh during his voluntary stay at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. The canvas captures the golden expanse of a wheat field under a blazing summer sun, with a lone reaper at work amid the rippling grain. Van Gogh described the scene in a letter to his brother Theo as an image of death — yet one that was serene rather than sorrowful, the reaper a figure of quiet inevitability set against the radiant warmth of the Provençal landscape. The painting is now held in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.
About the Artist
Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter whose work, though largely unrecognised during his lifetime, went on to profoundly influence 20th-century art. Born in Zundert, Netherlands, he produced over 2,100 artworks in just a decade — including around 860 oil paintings — marked by bold colours, expressive brushwork, and an emotional honesty rarely seen before. Struggling with mental illness throughout his adult life, Van Gogh channelled his anguish and wonder into canvases that today rank among the most celebrated and valuable in the world.
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