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Sunflowers by Van Gogh Trucker Hat

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White and Black

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Style: Foam Trucker Hat

Looking to cheer your team, promote your brand, or simply keep the sun out of your eyes? Our custom hats are the perfect way to meet all these needs and more. Customise the front with a logo, design, or text and create an essential accessory that you will never leave behind!

  • Adjustable from 17"/43.18cm to 24"/60.96cm
  • 100% polyester foam front
  • Wide area to feature your design
  • 100% nylon mesh back keeps you cool
  • Available in 11 colour combinations
Recommended for ages 13+

This product can expose you to chemicals including Diisononyl phthalate (DINP), which is known to the State of California to cause cancer / birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.

About This Design

Sunflowers by Van Gogh Trucker Hat

Sunflowers by Van Gogh Trucker Hat

Still Life: Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers Painting by Vincent van Gogh For expressionism is not simply a way of seeing things: it is also a way of making them, of painting them. An expressionist does not paint "flat" and in pure tones--he breaks up his tones and applies them with a liberal brush. It is striking indeed to find in Rembrandt, Hals, and the Van Gogh of the Nuenen period, the same concern for realism, the same sense of light and feeling for expressive detail, combined with a use of impasto that is no less expressive. In short, even the most detached and idealistic Dutch painters bear the mark of their national cultural traditions. Vermeer, however abstract, came under the infleunce of Caravaggio, that is to say, of realism; and, in our own time, Mondrian's abstractions represent an unusual aesthetic puritanism with a social bias. And Rembrandt's light is the spiritual expression of an observed reality--or at least of such elements of that reality as may be observed. But such realism, however frank (as in Frans Hals), is not so much concerned to respect the real, the physical aspect of things, as to express it. And while Van Gogh, as a Dutch painter, was certainly deeply attached to reality, his almost religious deference for it was not divorced from painterly considerations. Hence that arbitrary lighting, that no less arbitrary, dramatic and often caricatural distortion--in short, that rugged, uncouth expressionism in which there is nevertheless a glimmer of the total lyrical expression that would later be his. So it is that this essentially lyric painter began by painting the plebeian reality of his time, just as--he must have imagined--Rembrandt and Hals painted the bourgeois reality of theirs. The Head of an Old Peasant Woman, painted at Nuenen, and the hands of the Potato-Eaters thus echo in their crude, awkward way the Portrait of Margaretha Trip and the hands of the Regentessen. But Van Gogh had, as it were, mistaken the shadow for the substance, failing to perceive that Rembrandt's realism was in essence illusory. If the Dutch petits maîtres, and even more a major figure like the virtuoso Hals, were realists--reproducing, interpreting or stylising reality--Rembrandt, over and above his subject-matter, was a man obsessed by a light that was not of this world and which he pursued untiringly through the labyrinths of chiaroscuro. And Van Gogh, fancying himself a social realist, did not as yet realise that it was his mission, and his alone, not simply to mould the recalcitrant clay of reality but to liberate the pent-up inner light of the Night Watch and reveal it in all its radiance. Until that moment came, however, he was to languish in the sullen blacks and browns that express the "human, all too human" side of things. It was this innate taste for reality, moreover--above all, the reality of workers' and peasants' lives--which led him to admire and study the "painters after his own heart," for he had yet to enter on the period of colour innovation that was to link him up with other masters. Intuitive by nature and selftaught by inclination and the force of circumstances, Van Gogh always felt impelled to turn to the great painters, regarding them not so much as models in matters of technique as symbolic sponsors of his own experiments. His worship of Millet went deeper than a mere appreciation of his social realism, his predilection for human themes. He was no doubt first attracted by the way in which Millet depicted humble tillers of the soil and so well brought out those essential volumes that were in keeping with this subject. But a study of Van Gogh's various interpretations of Millet's pictures --The Reaper, The Midday Rest, The Sower--reveals that, for him, the all too famous stance of the sower, both realistic and romantic, was no mere literary or melodramatic gesture. For Van Gogh it expressed his own innermost being, his deep yearning for the soil, which he saw as the symbol, at once life-giving and oppressive, of reality as he had experienced it. Later, at Saint-Rémy, when he was repainting his early memories in those vivid colours which he had already borne within him in Holland without being aware of it, he recreated Millet's work in his own image. Delacroix was, to his mind, the embodiment of expression in terms of colour. Van Gogh had already discovered that master in Holland, and at Arles did not forget him. It is worth noting that, in a letter to Theo ( September 8, 1888), he quoted Paul Mantz's comment on the sketch for Christ on the Lake of Gennesareth: "I never realised one could get such terrific effects out of blue and green."

Customer Reviews

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My dad and I love the show Squidbillies, but now that I've moved out, we don't get to watch it together anymore. I figured this was the perfect gift for him on Christmas because we both think this is one of Early's funniest hats, and it has some sentimental value. Atleast, as much sentimental value as you can get with a hat that says "Booty Hunter" on it lol. It's big enough so that it will fit my dad's big ol' head, but its nice that it also has straps in the back, so he could adjust it if needed. I haven't tried to wash it yet, but I'm hoping the print lasts. Overall, I know my dad is going to love it and I can't wait to give it to him for Christmas. The quality of the image is excellent. The colors are bright and pop out, and the words are legible.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By P.10 June 2013Verified Purchase
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I wear this hat every day. All my friends keep asking where I get it from. Looks really good quality and fits perfect for me. Design was very well printed and looks even better then in a picture.
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By Leonardo W.11 July 2020Verified Purchase
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Soon as arrived I was happy with product Great quality An fit great. It was actually better then expected great quality good value im very happy

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buy sell special sale campaignclassic vintage stylish artistic lookold style simple plain retrostill life vase fifteen sunflowersvincent van gogh painting artoil canvas artwork impressionist classicarles france 1888 kröller müller museumotterlo netherlands europe intertanionaldutch master paris 19th centurytheo broker exhibition academy creative
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buy sell special sale campaignclassic vintage stylish artistic lookold style simple plain retrostill life vase fifteen sunflowersvincent van gogh painting artoil canvas artwork impressionist classicarles france 1888 kröller müller museumotterlo netherlands europe intertanionaldutch master paris 19th centurytheo broker exhibition academy creative

Other Info

Product ID: 148131689086927447
Created on 05/07/2013, 10:06
Rating: G