Moody painting
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The moody painting in Animal Crossing: New Horizons | ||||||
Real-world counterpart | ||||||
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The Sower | ||||||
Year | Unknown | |||||
Artist | Millet | |||||
Main appearances | ||||||
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Name in other languages
ちからづよいめいが
强健的名画 Toile puissante Retrato joven Quadro possente Энергичная картина
힘찬 명화 強健的名畫 Toile puissante Retrato joven Kraftgemälde Noest schilderij |
The moody painting is a painting in the Animal Crossing series introduced in Animal Crossing: City Folk. It is based on Jean-François Millet's The Sower; it is one of two of Millet pieces to appear in the Animal Crossing series, alongside the common painting.
Art details[edit]
In City Folk[edit]
Buy price | 3,920 Bells |
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Sell price | 490 Bells[nb 1] |
Obtain from | Crazy Redd's |
Authenticity | This painting can be a forgery. |
Furniture size |
- ↑ Sells for 10 Bells if it is a forgery.
In New Leaf[edit]
Museum description | This painting features a small town where the artist once lived. He is said to have influenced van Gogh. |
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Buy price | 3,920 Bells |
Sell price | 490 Bells |
Obtain from | Redd's Gallery |
Authenticity | This painting is always genuine. |
Furniture size |
In New Horizons[edit]
As with all artwork in Animal Crossing: New Horizons, the moody painting was added in the 1.2.0 April Free Update.
Museum description | Millet painted this piece of a farmer sowing wheat seeds in a field after moving to the countryside from Paris. If the piece reminds you of Van Gogh, that's likely because Van Gogh himself was inspired by it! |
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Buy price | 4,980 Bells |
Sell price | 1,245 Bells |
Obtain from | Jolly Redd's Treasure Trawler |
Authenticity | This painting is always genuine. |
Furniture size |
Gallery[edit]
Screenshots[edit]
The moody painting in New Horizons
Textures[edit]
The moody painting in New Leaf
Icons[edit]
Moody painting
(Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer)
Real-world information[edit]
A pioneering work of realism, this oil painting, completed in 1850, shows a glum-looking peasant sowing seeds in a field. This image of poverty enraged the upper classes of France at the time, who criticized his work for showing how workers struggled- many paintings at this time expressed an idyllic middle-class life, full of color and warmth.
The Sower is currently on display in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts.
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