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DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van
DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van

DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van Gogh Art Reproduction. Giclee Canvas Prints Wall Art for Home Decor. 24x30, 3pcs/set

Product ID : 33662828
4.7 out of 5 stars


Galleon Product ID 33662828
Shipping Weight 4 lbs
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Model
Manufacturer DECORARTS
Shipping Dimension 30.98 x 25 x 2.01 inches
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19,041

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DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van Features

  • MADE IN USA. Single Canvas Print Size: W 24 x H 30in, Total size of the three paintings: W 72 x H 30in. Brand Quality: production from one of the world's leading wall decor manufacturers, DecorArts a registered Trademark.

  • Van Gough's "Tree Roots" Comes in a set of 3.

  • Giclee Print Technology: Using archival-quality inks onto acid free cotton canvases, giclee printing guarantees incredible detail, phenomenal quality, and vibrant colors. Saturated colors for up to 100 years.

  • Semi-Gloss Acrylic Coating applied to waterproof for surface, enhance the texture of the painting to make better version and touch. Also extending the lifetime of the print and keeps it from fading.

  • Packed in Carton Box, Each Panel is Carefully Sealed by Air column Corner Wrap Protection. Plus Free Professional Picture Hanging Tools, Include Gloves, Nails, and Gradienter (level).


About DECORARTS - Tree Roots (3 Piece Set), Vincent Van

Tree Roots Tree Roots is an oil painting by Vincent van Gogh that he painted in July 1890 when he lived in Auvers-sur-Oise, France. The painting is an example of the double-square canvases that he employed in his last landscapes. Van Gogh spent the last few months of his life in Auvers-sur-Oise, a small town just north of Paris, after he left an asylum at Saint-Rmy in May 1890. The painting is considered by some to be his last painting before his death late July 1890. Jan Hulsker considers it the most original of his double-square canvases. The viewer thinks he can identify tree roots and trunks, but is hard put to identify the subject as a whole. Van der Veen and Knapp comment that in this painting, as also in Undergrowth with Two Figures, the painting itself and not the subject is pre-eminent, heralding abstract painting and German expressionism. As far back as 1882, while at The Hague, van Gogh had made a study of tree roots, Study of a Tree (below), which he had completed at the same time as a larger version (now lost) of Sorrow. In a letter to his brother Theo, van Gogh said that he wanted to express something of life's struggle in these drawings. It is not known whether he had returned to the same thoughts with his 1890 Tree Roots. The letters give no hint and the colours are perhaps too bright for such sombre thoughts.