Van Gogh • Post-Impressionism • Cult Paintings
Van Gogh: 100 Famous Paintings on Caffeine
The painter who looked at a sky, a chair, a wheat field and a few sunflowers, then gave them more emotion than a drama series in twelve seasons.
Here is the ranking of the 100 most famous paintings by Vincent van Gogh featured in the collection: starry nights, nocturnal cafés, self-portraits, sunflowers, irises, Auvers fields, yellow rooms and landscapes that seem to have downed an espresso before posing. Van Gogh doesn't just paint objects: he gives them tension, light, mood, and sometimes the feeling that a cypress just discovered theater.
Read Van Gogh
How to look at Van Gogh without your wall begging for an emotional break?
Van Gogh is painting that refuses to sit still. The outlines vibrate, the colors heat up, the skies swirl, the fields ripple, the flowers strike poses like stars, and the chairs seem to hold secrets. He belongs to Post-Impressionism, but he quickly spills beyond the label: he heraldsExpressionism, inspires Fauvism , and gives color an almost electric intensity.
To read his paintings, start with the brushstroke: it isn't just a technical detail, it's the engine. Then look at the color: it doesn't merely describe reality, it dramatizes it, warms it, shakes it—sometimes gently, sometimes like a brass band charging down a hallway. Finally, observe the series: the sunflowers, the self-portraits, the fields, the flowers, Auvers. Van Gogh returns to the same motifs the way a musician revisits a theme until the whole room begins to breathe.
Why this ranking?
Van Gogh: the man who turned yellow into a national event
In roughly ten years, Vincent van Gogh painted a body of work that has become one of the most recognizable in art history. From The Starry Night to Sunflowers, from Bedroom in Arles to Wheatfield with Crows, he built a universe where nature, objects, portraits, and landscapes become intense presences. In his work, painting does not quietly decorate: it walks in, sits down, speaks loudly, and then stays in memory.
This top 100 highlights the most famous and representative works of the collection: the great icons, the sunflower variants, the landscapes of Arles and Auvers, the portraits, the flowers, the fields, and the scenes inspired by Millet. To extend your visit, also explore Paul Gauguin, Paul Cézanne, Georges Seurat, Odilon Redon, Claude Monet and the major nearby movements such asImpressionism, Pointillism or Symbolism.
To complement your reading, you can consult the resources of the Van Gogh Museum, the dedicated page of the National Gallery or the dossier of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Warning: after this, even your pencil holder might demand a more expressive touch.
Illustrated ranking
The 100 most famous paintings by Van Gogh: sunflowers, stars, and walls on adrenaline
Each card leads to an available reproduction. The ranking has been realigned with the Van Gogh collection to bring the powerful works back up, avoid weak duplicates, and keep a coherent top 100.
Works 1 to 20
The absolute icons: those that make even tired walls look up
The Starry NightVan Gogh's most famous sky: a machine of cosmic swirls, bedroom version with a view of infinity.
Still Life: Vase with Fifteen SunflowersThe sunflowers enter history like a yellow troupe that is very sure of its charisma.
Café Terrace at NightThe most luminous terrace of the evening, perfect for proving that a café can rival the stars.
IrisesFlowers that settle for merely being pretty: they occupy space with remarkable botanical authority.
Van Gogh's Bedroom in ArlesThe most famous bedroom in art: a yellow bed, calm walls, a perspective slightly determined to live its own life.
Self-Portrait with Bandaged EarA self-portrait that has become legend, between silence, tension, and a bandage that clearly carries too much history.
Wheatfield with CrowsA dramatic field, nervous birds, a sky that has read too much dark poetry.
Starry Night Over the RhôneThe Rhône becomes a mirror of the sky, and the stars finally do their job of public decoration.
The Potato EatersA peasant scene that doesn't chase glamour, but finds a human power very difficult to ignore.
Almond BlossomA bouquet of blue sky and flowering branches, like a delicate pause in a very electric career.
Van Gogh's Chair with His PipeA chair so famous it could almost claim copyright against modern furniture.
Portrait of Dr. Gachet with a branch of foxgloveThe doctor looks as if he's carrying the weight of the world, or at least that of a very complicated afternoon.
The Night CaféA room so red and green you understand right away that the night is not going to end quietly.
Self-PortraitVan Gogh face to face with himself, and us face to face with a gaze that seems to have invented pictorial high voltage.
The Church at Auvers-sur-OiseA church that seems almost to breathe, with walls that ripple as if they had a soul.
Tree RootsThe roots take the floor, and they clearly have no plans to keep things simple.
Self-Portrait with Felt HatThe hat is set down, the gaze is intense, the brushwork asks no one's permission.
Self-Portrait with Straw HatA straw hat, but an intensity that could melt a sunshade.
Self-Portrait as a PainterThe painter with his tools: no unnecessary staging, just painting looking at painting.
Daubigny's GardenA garden that doesn't garden quietly: it vibrates, it breathes, it takes up space.
Works 21 to 40
Major works in the collection: Arles, Auvers, cypresses, and sunflowers
L'ArlésienneMadame Ginoux, a version with magnetic presence: she doesn't pose, she reigns.
First Steps, after MilletA tender scene after Millet, revisited with a gentleness that still keeps the sleeves rolled up.
The Siesta (The Nap)Even Van Gogh's nap has more texture than some very busy days.
The SunflowersThe Sunflowers are back on top: a yellow bouquet so famous it could light the room without a switch.
Paul Gauguin's ChairAn empty armchair, but a huge presence: with Van Gogh, even a chair can deliver a psychological portrait.
The Yellow HouseThe house in Arles becomes a yellow icon, with enough light to put the whole neighborhood to work.
The Red VineyardThe vineyard blazes, the landscape heats up, and Van Gogh turns the harvest into a bonfire of color.
Self-Portrait without BeardWithout a beard, but not without intensity. The gaze remains perfectly capable of lighting up a room.
Self-Portrait of Vincent van GoghA high-intensity self-portrait: the brushstroke swirls, the gaze holds steady, and the background dares not move.
The Sower at SunsetThe sower moves forward in an almost solar light: a simple gesture, yet charged like a rural epic.
Langlois BridgeA bridge, washerwomen, a clear sky: Arles begins to vibrate without asking permission.
The CypressesThe cypresses rise like vegetal flames: it is impossible to be more dramatic with trees.
Wheat Field with CypressesWheat, cypresses, a stirred-up sky: the countryside becomes an orchestra where every brushstroke plays too loudly, but very well well.
Road with Cypress and StarRoad, cypress, star: three elements, a mood of departure, and a sky watching over everything.
Olive Trees with the Alpilles in the BackgroundThe olive trees twist, the Alpilles respond, and the landscape pretends to be calm.
Olive Trees with Yellow Sky and SunThe yellow sky turns up the pressure, the olive trees ripple, and the sun takes over the whole scene.
Portrait of the Postman Joseph RoulinJoseph Roulin poses with a monumental beard and the quiet authority of a postman turned icon.
La BerceuseMadame Roulin rocks more than a cradle: she rocks an entire palette that refuses to sleep.
L'ArlésienneA final nod to L'Arlésienne: a series, several moods, always plenty of presence.
La MousméA frontal, colorful, vivid portrait: youth strikes a pose with a very Van Gogh decorative force.
Works 41 to 60
Auvers, flowers and fields: landscapes take the stage with their boots full of paint
The Father TanguyFather Tanguy sits down in front of the Japanese prints: Paris, Japonism and Van Gogh in the same room.
The Prisoners' RoundA dark, repetitive, suffocating round: freedom has clearly missed its appointment.
At the Gate of EternityA seated figure, bent by weariness: painting becomes silence, weight and humanity.
Wheat Field under Stormy SkiesThe wheat prepares to receive the weather, and the weather arrives with a tragic mood.
Wheat Fields after the RainThe rain has passed, but the field keeps that intensity of the day after that still smells of the storm.
Green Wheat Fields, AuversGreen takes the lead, the wheat follows, and Auvers becomes a vegetal wave.
Vase of IrisesIrises in a vase: less garden, more floral group portrait with great poise.
The IrisesThe irises return, because a flower with that much style deserves several entries.
Vase of RosesRoses in a vase, but not in polite bouquet mode: more like fresh mode with character.
ShoesWorn shoes, but an immense presence: Van Gogh writes a biography on two soles.
Plum Tree in Blossom, after HiroshigeVan Gogh dialogues with Hiroshige: Japonisme enters through color, line, and boldness.
Bridge in the Rain, after HiroshigeJapanese rain becomes Western painting under tension: a bridge, some strokes, and plenty of energy.
The Good SamaritanA biblical scene that climbs, leans, suffers, and helps: drama with service included.
The Pink RosesPink turns soft, but the brushstroke gently reminds us who holds the brush.
SunflowersSunflowers again, yes. When yellow works this well, you don't put it out to pasture.
Sunflowers (Vase with Twelve Sunflowers)Twelve sunflowers, a yellow gathering that has clearly met its quorum.
SunflowersMore sunflowers, because Van Gogh knew exactly when an idea deserved a reminder.
Two Cut SunflowersTwo sunflowers laid flat, but never without personality. The yellow keeps its pride.
Two SunflowersThe floral duo that proves you don’t need to be fifteen to fill the whole stage.
Skull of a SkeletonA skull that smokes as if it had grasped human absurdity before anyone else: strange, funny, and very Van Gogh.
Works 61 to 80
Cottages, roads, and characters: Auvers becomes a gripping pictorial serial
The ShoesA pair of worn shoes, almost portraits: weariness becomes matter, and the leather says more than a long speech.
Self-Portrait with Pipe and Straw HatA steady gaze, a calm pipe, a hat firmly in place: Van Gogh once again turns his face into a laboratory of color.
Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul GauguinA self-portrait conceived as an exchange from artist to artist: frontal, intense, and already charged with Arlesian tension.
Portrait of GauguinGauguin seen by Van Gogh: a portrait that feels less like a courtesy than an electric conversation between painters.
The ZouaveThe military model becomes an explosion of color: the portrait holds its pose, but the palette leads the battle.
The Seated ZouaveEven seated, the zouave won’t behave: Van Gogh gives him a lively, almost theatrical presence.
Landscape with Couple Walking and Crescent MoonA couple walks beneath the moon, the road stretches on, the landscape dreams: Van Gogh can turn a stroll into the opening chapter of a novel.
The White House at NightA bright house in the night, almost an apparition: the apparent calm hides a real tension of light.
Wheat Field with IrisesWheat and irises share the scene with elegance: nature becomes a vibrant carpet of color.
Three Sunflowers in a VaseOnly three sunflowers, but enough yellow to keep an entire room in suspense.
Four Withered SunflowersThe flowers may fade, but the charisma remains: Van Gogh proves that even decline can have light.
Agostina Segatori at the Café du TambourinA café portrait, between Parisian modernity and a gaze that seems to have seen many bills go by.
Mademoiselle Gachet at the PianoA piano, a figure, an atmosphere: the music seems almost painted into the walls.
Mademoiselle Gachet in the GardenThe garden becomes a setting, the portrait becomes a stroll, and the greenery plays its supporting role beautifully.
Thatched Cottages at CordevilleThe thatched roofs become miniature mountains, and the houses take on a heroic air.
Houses at Auvers-sur-OiseThe houses line up, but not too calmly: they know Van Gogh, so they vibrate.
Landscape at TwilightTwilight arrives, and the light gives its final speech before leaving the stage.
Chestnut Trees in BlossomThe chestnut trees put out their flowers like a vegetal fanfare in spring.
Wheat Fields with Auvers in the BackgroundThe village waits in the back, but the wheat takes the whole foreground like a local star.
The Langlois Bridge at ArlesA bolder version of the Arles bridge: clean structure, clear sky, calm water, and a touch of genius at the edge of the canal.
Works 81 to 100
Final gems: flowers, roads, and houses round out the ranking in beautifully agitated fashion
The AlyscampsThe Arles avenue becomes a very Van Gogh autumn walk: the trees nearly stroll along with the passersby.
The Alyscamps: Falling Autumn LeavesThe leaves fall, the trunks set the scene's rhythm, and autumn takes on the air of a colorful procession.
The Lovers: The Poet's Garden IVThe garden becomes an intimate theater: two figures, trees, and an Arles atmosphere that speaks softly but at length.
Couple in the Park at ArlesThe poet's garden returns with a couple, nervous trunks, and that light that gives the paths a real personality.
Portrait of Armand RoulinThe Roulin family enters the late part of the ranking with a portrait that is direct, colorful, solid, and impossible to treat as an extra.
Portrait of Camille RoulinCamille Roulin keeps a seemingly calm composure, but Van Gogh's brushwork around him clearly refuses to stay quiet.
Portrait of Augustine RoulinAugustine Roulin commands a stronger presence than many landscapes: calm, frontal, with colors lying in wait.
La Roulin with her babyA maternal scene that could have been merely tender; Van Gogh clearly adds density and tension.
Marcelle Roulin babyA small portrait of a baby, but treated with intense presence: even Marcelle is given her Van Gogh vibration.
Portrait of Père TanguyThe art dealer friend of the artists, surrounded by Japanese motifs: an essential portrait for understanding Parisian Van Gogh.
Portrait of Theo van GoghTheo deserves his place: without him, Vincent's story would have had far less light, support, and saved paintings.
Portrait of Doctor ReyDoctor Rey receives a frontal, vivid, almost brutal portrait: Van Gogh does not exactly practice the lukewarm portrait.
The Sower IIThe sower returns because in Van Gogh's work this motif is not a simple figure: it is almost a philosophy in motion.
The Sower IAnother version of the sower, denser and more sun-drenched: the field becomes a stage, the gesture becomes a symbol.
The Sower: the surroundings of Arles in the backgroundArles behind, the sower in front: a composition where the sun seems to push the seeds as much as the color.
The harvestThe reaper and the wheat field bring back the great theme of rural labor, but with the luminous fever of Saint-Rémy.
Paddock with plowmanThe plowman traces the earth, Van Gogh traces emotion: the field becomes an almost mental terrain.
The Olive HarvestThe olive trees, the figures, and the branches echo one another: the harvest scene takes on an almost musical rhythm.
The garden of the Saint-Rémy asylumSaint-Rémy without a grand dramatic sky, but with a dense, restless garden, and enough green to fill the entire silence.
RosesA stronger ending with Van Gogh's roses: less thunderous than the sunflowers, but just as determined.
Suggested route
Which Van Gogh to choose for a wall that refuses to be boring?
For a spectacular room, start with The Starry Night, Terrace of the Café at Evening or Wheatfield with Crows. These works immediately give character to an interior: the sky swirls, the colors vibrate, the wall stops pretending to be neutral.
For a brighter, more decorative atmosphere, the Sunflowers, Irises, Almond Blossom and the bouquets work very well. They add color, energy, and poetry without turning the room into an existential crisis room. Finally, for a more intimate atmosphere, the self-portraits, Van Gogh's Room in Arles or Portrait of Dr. Gachet bring a very strong human depth.
Van Gogh naturally engages in dialogue with the neighboring artists and movements in the catalog: Gauguin for symbolic flat areas, Cézanne for structure, Monet for light, Seurat for organized color, Munch for intense emotion and Klimt for the flamboyant setting. In short: Van Gogh lights the fuse, the other movements extend the artistic fire.
For a sunny atmosphere
- Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers for a wall that wants to become a source of light.
- Almond Blossom for a softer, fresher and more poetic décor.
- Iris for a bold floral touch without falling into a timid bouquet.
For a more dramatic atmosphere
- The Starry Night for a sky that takes up the whole conversation.
- Wheatfield with Crows for powerful visual tension.
- Café Terrace at Night for a room that isn’t afraid of intense colours.
FAQ
FAQ on Van Gogh paintings
What is Van Gogh's most famous painting?
Vincent van Gogh's most famous painting is generally The Starry Night. It is one of the most iconic images in art history, with its swirling sky, dark cypress tree, and nocturnal village.
Which Van Gogh paintings are most popular for home decor?
The most popular works for decor are The Starry Night, Sunflowers, Café Terrace at Night, Irises, Almond Blossom, Van Gogh's Bedroom in Arles, and Starry Night Over the Rhône. They instantly bring color, energy, and character to any interior.
Why did Van Gogh paint so many sunflowers?
Sunflowers allowed Van Gogh to explore the color yellow, light, texture, and the variations of a single motif. They are also tied to his time in Arles and his project of decorating the Yellow House.
Is Van Gogh part of Impressionism?
Van Gogh is more accurately classified as Post-Impressionist. He took up some of the Impressionists' explorations of light and color, but he pushed the brushstroke, emotion, and expression much further.
Which Van Gogh painting should I choose for a living room?
For a bright living room, Sunflowers, Irises, or Almond Blossom are excellent choices. For a bolder, more dramatic feel, The Starry Night, Café Terrace at Night, or Wheatfield with Crows bring plenty of personality.
Conclusion: Van Gogh, or the wall that suddenly comes alive
With these 100 paintings, Van Gogh shows why he remains one of the most beloved artists in the world: he turns flowers into solar explosions, fields into inner storms, skies into whirlwinds, chairs into portraits, and villages into breathing landscapes. It is living, nervous, luminous painting, sometimes fragile, always unforgettable. In short: if your wall is still yawning after that, it's putting up a fight.
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