The artwork titled “Woman Working in Wheat Field” was created by Vincent van Gogh in 1890 during his time in Auvers-sur-Oise, France. This piece, rendered with chalk on paper, falls within the Post-Impressionism movement and represents a sketch and study genre. Currently, it is housed in the Van Gogh Museum located in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
The artwork depicts a woman engaged in labor within a wheat field. The simplicity of the medium—chalk on paper—enhances the rustic and earnest nature of the scene. The strokes are emphatic and expressive, characteristic of van Gogh’s post-impressionist style. The woman, dressed in work attire, is central to the composition, bent over as she toils amidst the undulating lines that represent the wheat. In the background, sketched elements suggest buildings and vegetation, providing a context of rural landscape which situates the subject firmly within the agrarian toil of the period. The sketch is marked by a sense of movement and vitality, echoing the daily life and labor captured so poignantly by van Gogh.