
The Red Vineyard by Van Gogh
The Red Vineyard is one of Van Gogh's most celebrated harvest scenes — painted in Arles in November 1888, it depicts workers moving through rows of vines blazing with autumnal colour. The landscape glows with deep crimson and amber, the low sun casting long reflections across wet ground in the foreground. Van Gogh's brushwork is confident and rhythmic here: broad gestural strokes give the scene a physical urgency that draws the eye across the whole composition without letting it rest in any single place.
On canvas, the brushwork gains tactile presence and the colour fields deepen with a warmth that echoes the original painting's physical surface — making this canvas print a natural format for work rooted in the painted tradition.
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The Red Vineyard by Van Gogh
The Red Vineyard is one of Van Gogh's most celebrated harvest scenes — painted in Arles in November 1888, it depicts workers moving through rows of vines blazing with autumnal colour. The landscape glows with deep crimson and amber, the low sun casting long reflections across wet ground in the foreground. Van Gogh's brushwork is confident and rhythmic here: broad gestural strokes give the scene a physical urgency that draws the eye across the whole composition without letting it rest in any single place.
On canvas, the brushwork gains tactile presence and the colour fields deepen with a warmth that echoes the original painting's physical surface — making this canvas print a natural format for work rooted in the painted tradition.
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The Red Vineyard is one of Van Gogh's most celebrated harvest scenes — painted in Arles in November 1888, it depicts workers moving through rows of vines blazing with autumnal colour. The landscape glows with deep crimson and amber, the low sun casting long reflections across wet ground in the foreground. Van Gogh's brushwork is confident and rhythmic here: broad gestural strokes give the scene a physical urgency that draws the eye across the whole composition without letting it rest in any single place.
On canvas, the brushwork gains tactile presence and the colour fields deepen with a warmth that echoes the original painting's physical surface — making this canvas print a natural format for work rooted in the painted tradition.























