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WahooArt use the latest printing technology to produce archival-quality textured cotton canvas prints that will give pleasure on your wall for a long time to come. Textured print gives to your painting reproduction a brushstroke/texture effect, which gives incredible look of a real oil canvas masterpiece.
WahooArt.com use only the most modern and efficient printing technology on our 100% cotton canvas 400Gsm, based on the Giclee printing procedure. This innovative high-resolution printing technique results in durable and spectacular looking prints of the highest quality. WahooArt.com only uses the highest quality inks, with extreme UV resistance. Your artwork will hold its beautiful colors for up to 75 years!
Textured print perfectly suits for Fine Art reproductions! WahooArt Team suggest to orderacrylic print for colorful,familly and modernphotos.
- FAQ 1/2 - FAQ 2/2 - Giclée print of your own
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Buy an oil painting reproduction. | Vincent Van Gogh - The Potato Eaters
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Arts & Entertainment > Hobbies & Creative Arts > Artwork
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PrintsOnCanvas [{A-8YDPYD}]-Dim(21 x 14.8 inches (53.3 x 37.6 cm))-DC(MHZKF10)-Shipping(Slow)-NAMEPLATE-GlossyTextured-FRAME(W218Y)-Vincent Van Gogh-The Potato Eaters
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The Potato Eaters (Dutch: De Aardappeleters) is a painting by the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh which he painted in April 1885 while in Nuenen, Netherlands. It is in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. The version at the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo is a preliminary oil sketch, and he also made a version as a lithograph. In 1885 van Gogh made several versions of the Potato Eaters.[/br]
During March and the beginning of April 1885 he sketched studies for the painting, and corresponded with his brother Theo, who was not impressed with his current work or the sketches Van Gogh sent him in Paris. He worked on the painting from April 13 until the beginning of May, when it was mostly done except for minor changes which he made with a small brush later the same year.[/br]
Van Gogh said he wanted to depict peasants as they really were. He deliberately chose coarse and ugly models, thinking that they would be natural and unspoiled in his finished work: 'You see, I really have wanted to make it so that people get the idea that these folk, who are eating their potatoes by the light of their little lamp, have tilled the earth themselves with these hands they are putting in the dish, and so it speaks of manual labor and — that they have thus honestly earned their food. I wanted it to give the idea of a wholly different way of life from ours — civilized people. So I certainly don’t want everyone just to admire it or approve of it without knowing why.'
Writing to his sister Willemina two years later in Paris, Van Gogh still considered The Potato Eaters his most successful painting: 'What I think about my own work is that the painting of the peasants eating potatoes that I did in Nuenen is after all the best thing I did'). However, the work was criticized by his friend Anthon van Rappardsoon after it was painted. This was a blow to van Gogh's confidence as an emerging artist, and he wrote back to his friend, 'you...had no right to condemn my work in the way you did' (July 1885), and later, 'I am always doingwhat I can't do yet in order to learn how to do it.' (August 1885).
Vincent Van Gogh
Vincent Van Gogh
Oil On Canvas
Oil On Canvas