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Vincent Van Gogh
Vincent Van Gogh
Vincent Van Gogh
Vincent Van Gogh

Vincent Van Gogh

Secondhand
Indicative market price: R2,500
R1,500.00 40% OFF
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Product information

Condition:
Secondhand
Location:
South Africa
Bob Shop ID:
614010827

Fishing Boats On The Beach 1888 by
Vincent Van Gogh Lithograph Print
Framed Under Glass
Vintage
Signature : Vincent
Fabulous Collectable Value High due to Vintage Classification..
50cm X 40cm

Fishing Boats on the Beach at Saintes-Maries is an 1888 oil painting by the Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. 
In June 1888, Van Gogh took a 30-mile stagecoach trip from Arles to the sea-side fishing village of Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Van Gogh's week-long trip was taken to recover from his health problems and make some seaside paintings and drawings. At that time, Saintes-Maries was a small fishing village with under a hundred homes.
Van Gogh has described with joy his visit to the Mediterranean shore near Arles at the fishing village of Sainte-Maries, where he painted and drew for several days. It was a new world for him, and he responded to it with his usual eagerness and excitement.
In the picture of the fishing boats, two different kinds of vision are united in one work: nature is seen as light and airy, in countless tones of high-keyed color, ever-changing and vibrant through universal contrast; on the other hand, man's objects, the boats, drawn precisely and painted in flat airless tones of primary color. The pearly softness of the seascape becomes a setting for the hard, firmly compartmented colors of the boats. But these boats, disposed along the beach beside one another, overlapping and with crossing masts, make an intricate network of spots and colored lines, which participate in the unstable airy shiftings of the natural tones, in the irregular patterns of the seashore and the waves, and the vast currents of the shapeless clouds. This network of the boats is a typical pattern of Van Gogh's vision; it had appeared already in his Dutch period in the drawings of trees, and as in those early works the branchings of the boat are drawn with unflagging devotion to the detailed individual shapes.

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