A Vincent Van Gogh aficionado in Bosnia has turned a plot of land into a giant, living reproduction of the painter's masterpiece, "Starry Night", composed of thousands of plants.
"Vincent Van Gogh belongs to us too. It's our heritage and this is a way of paying tribute to him," Halim Zukic told AFP.
Behind him, tens of thousands of lavender bushes, grasses and other plants form swirls and spirals across a dozen hectares that - seen from the air - unmistakably resemble the celestial configuration painted by the Dutch post-Impressionist master in 1889.
"It wasn't possible to simply reproduce a flat image on a three-dimensional space," Zukic said.
"Inspired by the painting, we tried to stick to the shapes and proportions, so that it looks like the painting as much as possible. "And I think we succeeded."
The 56-year-old entrepreneur first noticed the land 20 years ago when he was returning from a day out picking mushrooms nearby, in the woods surrounding the village of Luznica in central Bosnia.
He bought the first plot with the idea of building a hut and creating a small, rounded garden.