Object Image

Wheat Field with Cypresses

Cypresses gained ground in Van Gogh’s work by late June 1889 when he resolved to devote one of his first series in Saint-Rémy to the towering trees. Distinctive for their rich impasto, his exuberant on-the-spot studies include the Met’s close-up vertical view of cypresses (49.30) and this majestic horizontal composition, which he illustrated in reed-pen drawings sent to his brother on July 2. Van Gogh regarded the present work as one of his “best” summer landscapes and was prompted that September to make two studio renditions: one on the same scale (National Gallery, London) and the other a smaller replica, intended as a gift for his mother and sister (private collection).

Credit: Purchase, The Annenberg Foundation Gift, 1993

1889
Oil on canvas
73.2 x 93.4cm
1993.132
Image and text © Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2019

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Permanent collection

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