Scarf - Van Gogh Starry Night Faux Silk Square, 35.5 in
Scarf - Van Gogh Starry Night Faux Silk Square, 35.5 in
SKU:EV1021
In stock
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A Night Sky You Can Wear
Some paintings stop you in your tracks. The Starry Night is one of them -- a swirling, electric vision of the night sky over Saint-Remy-de-Provence that has captivated the world since Van Gogh painted it in 1889. Now you can carry that energy with you everywhere. This Van Gogh Starry Night faux silk square scarf reproduces the masterpiece in breathtaking detail: the great churning spirals of deep indigo and cobalt blue, the blazing golden moon, the luminous stars radiating light, and the quiet sleeping village below with its soaring church steeple.
Crafted from satin polyester faux silk, this 35.5 x 35.5 inch square scarf has the look and feel of luxurious silk without the delicate care requirements. The satin finish catches the light beautifully, making the blues seem to glow just as they do on the canvas. Printed on one side with neatly stitched edges, it drapes elegantly whether worn as a neck scarf, head wrap, shoulder wrap, or tied as an accent on a handbag. Pair it with our Museum Tote Bag Collection for a complete museum-inspired look.
This scarf makes an effortless and memorable gift -- for the art lover in your life, as a museum shop souvenir, or as a treat for yourself after a gallery visit. It arrives ready to gift and ready to wear.
- Material: Satin polyester faux silk
- Size: 35.5 x 35.5 inches (90 x 90 cm)
- Printed one side | Stitched edges | Satin finish | Vibrant colors
Vincent van Gogh Ñ Master of Post-Impressionism
Vincent van Gogh (1853Ð1890) is one of the most recognized and deeply beloved artists in the history of Western art. Born in the Netherlands, he produced nearly 900 paintings and over 1,100 drawings in just a decade of intense creative work, yet sold almost nothing during his lifetime. Today, his works are among the most valuable and widely reproduced in the world.
Van Gogh was a leading figure of Post-Impressionism, a movement that emerged in the late 19th century as artists began pushing beyond the Impressionists' focus on light and atmosphere toward something more emotionally expressive and structurally bold. Where the Impressionists captured the fleeting surface of the visible world, Post-Impressionists like Van Gogh used color, line, and texture as tools of inner feeling. His brushwork is unmistakable: thick, swirling, almost sculptural strokes that pulse with energy and movement, as if the landscape itself is alive and breathing. His color palette Ñ incandescent yellows, deep blues, vibrant greens -- was chosen not for accuracy but for emotional truth. The Starry Night, painted during his voluntary stay at an asylum in Saint-Remy, is the fullest expression of that vision: the universe as a dynamic, swirling force, overwhelming in its beauty and intensity.
