Description
Giclée art print with high colour gamut and a 10.3 mil thick enhanced matte paper that can last for more than 70 years. Arrives carefully wrapped in tissue paper.
Artwork
In May 1889, after episodes of self-mutilation and hospitalization, Vincent van Gogh chose to enter an asylum in Saint-Rémy, France. There, in the last year before his death, he created almost 130 paintings. Within the first week, he began Irises, working from nature in the asylum's garden. The cropped composition, divided into broad areas of vivid color with monumental irises overflowing its borders, was probably influenced by the decorative patterning of Japanese woodblock prints. More