Wheat Field with Crows, oil painting by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. It is among the most famous and most emotionally evocative of his oeuvre, and its interpretation has been intensely debated.
This is one of van Gogh’s final pictures. It was painted in Auvers in July 1890, shortly before his suicide. According to some reports, it is actually the same field where the artist shot himself. In a brief note about the scene, van Gogh said: “Returning there, I set to work. The brush almost fell from my hands . . . I had no difficulty in expressing sadness and extreme solitude.”
Echoes of the artist’s despair are plainly evident in the painting. Elements of the natural world, which he had so often celebrated joyously in his art, here take on a threatening tone. The overripe wheat does not sway gently; it pulsates, almost like a raging fire. Above, the sky darkens and huge black crows, reduced to simple stabs of paint, advance toward the viewer, like portents of death. Even the structure of the picture is unsettling. Instead of converging toward the horizon, the composition is pulled toward the foreground by three rough paths. The two at the side disappear off the canvas, while the central one ends abruptly. The spectator, like the artist, feels hemmed in.
During his final years, van Gogh worked at phenomenal speed, sometimes completing one or two pictures in a day. He worked right through the hottest part of the afternoon, and there is a theory (among many others) that his psychiatric illness was brought on by sunstroke. This frenetic activity is clearly visible in the finished works. Van Gogh applied his paint very thickly, making no attempt to smooth out the surface or blend his colours carefully. This is what gives his paintings such a sense of intense and vibrant energy.