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      <title>Vincent van Gogh_A4 by Vassiggio Vicky</title>
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      <description>A4_4th Lyceum Acharnon</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2018-12-29 09:44:52 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>nikos.nto_ Sunflowers painted 1888 by Vincent van Gogh </title>
         <author></author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/vassiggio/esyllcngnuzc/wish/2383008359</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<div>He&nbsp;named it sunflowers because he once saw it as a decorative that had become something almost sacred,a symbol that represented light itself,an ideal of an honest life lived in nature.      He used the impasto technique to create an image that is even more dynamic due to the fact that the oil paint recreates the three dimensional textures of the sunflowers he was painting.     We can find the painting in the national gallery in London.     The main reason i liked it is because it looks real,it has bright and sunny colours and it shows the nature </div>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2022-11-14 14:40:33 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>gursimran singh rathor Vincent van GoghThe Starry NightSaint Rémy, June 1889</title>
         <author></author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/vassiggio/esyllcngnuzc/wish/2446952351</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<ul><li>Vincent van GoghThe Starry NightSaint Rémy, June 1889<br><br></li></ul><div><br></div><div><a href="https://www.moma.org/artists/2206">Vincent van Gogh</a><em>The Starry Night</em>Saint Rémy, June 1889</div><ul><li><br></li></ul><div><br>In creating this image of the night sky—dominated by the bright moon at right and Venus at center left—van Gogh heralded modern painting’s new embrace of mood, expression, symbol, and sentiment. Inspired by the view from his window at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy, in southern France, where the artist spent twelve months in 1889–90 seeking reprieve from his mental illnesses, <em>The Starry Night</em> (made in mid-June) is both an exercise in observation and a clear departure from it. The vision took place at night, yet the painting, among hundreds of artworks van Gogh made that year, was created in several sessions during the day, under entirely different atmospheric conditions. The picturesque village nestled below the hills was based on other views—it could not be seen from his window—and the cypress at left appears much closer than it was. And although certain features of the sky have been reconstructed as observed, the artist altered celestial shapes and added a sense of glow.<br>Van Gogh assigned an emotional language to night and nature that took them far from their actual appearances. Dominated by vivid blues and yellows applied with gestural verve and immediacy, <em>The Starry Night</em> also demonstrates how inseparable van Gogh’s vision was from the new procedures of painting he had devised, in which color and paint describe a world outside the artwork even as they telegraph their own status as, merely, color and paint.</div><div><br></div>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2023-01-17 14:50:59 UTC</pubDate>
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