Explore Meaning, Value, and Details in Great Paintings
Discover famous artworks, understand what they mean, see how much they are worth, and zoom in on the details that matter.
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Explore Painting Details
Willy Lott's Cottage
in The Hay Wain by John Constable
The whitewashed farmhouse on the Stour—Willy Lott’s Cottage—anchors the left bank of John Constable’s The Hay Wain. Rooted in the artist’s boyhood landscape and refined through years of study, it becomes the painting’s emblem of a settled, working rural life.
The Farm Cart in the Stream
in The Hay Wain by John Constable
At the very heart of Constable’s The Hay Wain sits the farm cart—an empty, low‑sided wain—halted mid‑ford in the millpond of the River Stour. More than a picturesque accent, its watery passage folds practical rural routine into a grand landscape, bridging Dutch precedents and Constable’s modern claim that ordinary labor could carry epic weight.
The Sea of Fog
in The Wanderer above the Sea of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich
The sea of fog in Friedrich’s Wanderer above the Sea of Fog is both a real weather phenomenon and a metaphysical stage. This luminous cloud‑ocean turns mountains into islands and makes the act of looking—into the unknown—the painting’s central drama.
The Rückenfigur
in The Wanderer above the Sea of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich
Friedrich’s Rückenfigur—the solitary man seen from behind—turns a panoramic view into a drama of looking. Standing exactly where our eyes would stand, he fuses landscape, philosophy, and selfhood, transforming the painting into an image about perception itself.
Featured Artworks

Spirit of the Dead Watching
Paul Gauguin (1892)
Spirit of the Dead Watching stages a nocturnal confrontation between a rigid, prone nude and a dark, hooded presence at the bed’s edge, fusing <strong>desire</strong> with <strong>dread</strong>. Flat patterns, cloisonné outlines, and violet-black fields convert the room into a symbolic plane where a Tahitian <strong>tupapaú</strong> may be either guardian or threat. The work crystallizes Gauguin’s Synthetist aim to make color and contour carry <strong>mythic psychology</strong> rather than mere description <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Vision After the Sermon
Paul Gauguin (1888)
Paul Gauguin’s Vision After the Sermon (1888) stages a divide between lived ritual and <strong>collective vision</strong>: Breton women pray in the foreground while, across a diagonal tree, Jacob wrestles an angel on a <strong>flat red field</strong>. With <strong>bold contours</strong> and <strong>non‑naturalistic color</strong>, Gauguin turns faith into pictorial form, making inner experience the painting’s true subject <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

The Yellow Christ
Paul Gauguin (1889)
Paul Gauguin’s The Yellow Christ (1889) fuses sacred narrative with everyday Brittany, rendering a lemon‑<strong>yellow</strong> Christ in a rural autumn landscape. Through <strong>Synthetist</strong> color and <strong>Cloisonnist</strong> contours, the work declares spiritual meaning over naturalism, placing devotion among kneeling Breton women beneath a banded, hope‑tinged sky <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?
Paul Gauguin (1897–1898)
A panoramic frieze staged in a Tahitian grove, Paul Gauguin’s Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? unfolds right-to-left as a cycle of life, from an infant at the far right to an aged woman at the far left. Amid saturated blues and ochres, a central figure reaches for fruit and a pale-blue idol stands motionless, creating a theatre of <strong>origin, desire, and destiny</strong> that never resolves into a single answer.

Evening on Karl Johan
Edvard Munch (1892)
Evening on Karl Johan by Edvard Munch stages a fashionable Oslo boulevard as a scene of <strong>urban dread</strong>. A mask-faced crowd in top hats surges forward while an <strong>isolated silhouette</strong> recedes at right, and tilted buildings glow with jaundiced windows under a cold blue sky. Munch converts a social promenade into a <strong>symbol of alienation</strong> through compressed space, skewed color, and nervous brushwork <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup><sup>[3]</sup><sup>[4]</sup>.

The Sick Child
Edvard Munch (1885–86)
The Sick Child condenses a bedside vigil into a stark drama of <strong>love and helplessness</strong>. A pale, copper-haired girl glows against a chalky pillow while a bowed caregiver clasps her hand; the scraped, striated paint makes grief feel <strong>present and eroding</strong> at once <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>. Sparse props—a bottle, a glass, a thin red line—stand as mute emblems of medicine’s limits.