Cypresses with Two Figures by Vincent van Gogh - June 1889 - February 1890 - 91,6 × 72,4 cm Kröller-Müller Museum Cypresses with Two Figures by Vincent van Gogh - June 1889 - February 1890 - 91,6 × 72,4 cm Kröller-Müller Museum

Cypresses with Two Figures

Oil on canvas • 91,6 × 72,4 cm
  • Vincent van Gogh - March 30, 1853 - July 29, 1890 Vincent van Gogh June 1889 - February 1890

Hello on Sunday! Today we start a new partnership with our favorite Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo. For the next four weeks we will be presenting amazing masterpieces created by Vincent van Gogh from their collection (and they have a LOT of amazing van Goghs). Enjoy!

Van Gogh finds the dark cypresses with their flaming silhouettes so characteristic of Provence, "as regards lines and proportions, like an Egyptian obelisk. And the green has such a distinguished quality. It’s the dark patch in a sun-drenched landscape, but it’s one of the most interesting dark notes, the most difficult to hit off exactly that I can imagine."

He describes this painting as "a group of them [cypresses] in the corner of a wheat field on a summer’s day when the mistral is blowing. […] enveloped in blue moving in great circulating currents of air." It is one of his works with the most impasto. The trees are made up of curly, flame-like brushstrokes and all the surrounding vegetation is also full of life, as though the mistral is raging violently.

The critic Albert Aurier published an article full of praise for Van Gogh’s work in January 1890. He commended the painter as a dreaming realist who bent reality to his will in an unparalleled manner. Van Gogh was pleasantly surprised by this, even though he felt that Aurier paid him too great a tribute. By way of thanks, he sent him this Cypresses with Two Figures.

P.S. In our stunning Vincent van Gogh Notebook you will find other cypresses painted by van Gogh. :) Check it out in the DailyArt Shop!

P.P.S. Vincent van Gogh landscapes give us a glimpse into his moods and characters. Van Gogh's relationship with nature defined both his life and art.