Bildbeschreibung «Wild rose»
Creative life of a brilliant impressionist Vincent van Gogh was brief, but no doubt extremely fruitful. In 1890, shortly before his death, being treated in the hospital Saint-Remy, painter worked with maximum impact, amazing for their tenacity and hard work of doctors and relatives. Bouts of mental illness caused him to maximize periods of remission.
Nature has always been the main source of inspiration from van Gogh. Depicting landscapes, one after another, inspired by the beauty of the garden that stretches around the hospital, the artist has created numerous works, which will adorn the collections of the leading galleries in the world.
Van Gogh painting "Wild roses" written using the technique of outlining the details, which the artist learned from the Japanese traditional techniques of creating prints. On the canvas depicts flowering branches of the wild rose. Delicate white flowers are surrounded by leaves. Each leaf distinctly outlined, the flowers, on the contrary, shows light and airy.
His wonderful picture "Wild rose" van Gogh wrote, habitually playing with color – the leaves of roses blue rather than green. The artist was convinced that it is not necessary to convey what he saw. You can and should use colors boldly and proizvolnoi to convey on canvas their own experiences of the landscape, its particular world-view. The painter skillfully emphasized the discreet charm of wild flowers, their modest charm. The background against which the master has placed a sloppy brushstrokes of turquoise, something reminiscent of the choppy water. Van Gogh fully managed to convey the tenderness of wild roses, the lovely fickleness, the fragility and serenity of a summer day, providing an opportunity to feel it and contemplating. Obviously, like trying to find solace and himself suffering genius.
The van Gogh painting "Wild roses" can be seen by visiting the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Hundreds of thousands of copies of the painting sold around the world, decorating offices and living rooms.