
Bouquet of Sunflowers by Claude Monet
Painted in 1881, Bouquet of Sunflowers is a study in golden intensity. Monet arranges a loose cluster of blooms against a pale, neutral ground, letting the saturated yellows and bronzed centres speak without competition. The brushwork is characteristically varied — broad and gestural in the petals, more deliberate at the stems and leaves — creating a sense of physical weight and freshness simultaneously. Unlike many Impressionist floral works, this one feels direct and unhurried, the gaze of a painter who genuinely loves the subject in front of him.
Sunflowers were made for canvas. The warm, golden palette deepens against the woven surface, and the texture adds a tactile richness that suits Monet's loaded brushstrokes perfectly. This canvas art print is produced in Berlin to museum-grade standards, using archival inks that preserve every nuance of the original.
Painted in 1881, Bouquet of Sunflowers is a study in golden intensity. Monet arranges a loose cluster of blooms against a pale, neutral ground, letting the saturated yellows and bronzed centres speak without competition. The brushwork is characteristically varied — broad and gestural in the petals, more deliberate at the stems and leaves — creating a sense of physical weight and freshness simultaneously. Unlike many Impressionist floral works, this one feels direct and unhurried, the gaze of a painter who genuinely loves the subject in front of him.
Sunflowers were made for canvas. The warm, golden palette deepens against the woven surface, and the texture adds a tactile richness that suits Monet's loaded brushstrokes perfectly. This canvas art print is produced in Berlin to museum-grade standards, using archival inks that preserve every nuance of the original.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
Painted in 1881, Bouquet of Sunflowers is a study in golden intensity. Monet arranges a loose cluster of blooms against a pale, neutral ground, letting the saturated yellows and bronzed centres speak without competition. The brushwork is characteristically varied — broad and gestural in the petals, more deliberate at the stems and leaves — creating a sense of physical weight and freshness simultaneously. Unlike many Impressionist floral works, this one feels direct and unhurried, the gaze of a painter who genuinely loves the subject in front of him.
Sunflowers were made for canvas. The warm, golden palette deepens against the woven surface, and the texture adds a tactile richness that suits Monet's loaded brushstrokes perfectly. This canvas art print is produced in Berlin to museum-grade standards, using archival inks that preserve every nuance of the original.























