MYTHOLOGY
Archeological research shows that about 5000 years ago, people were already cultivating the sunflower in North America. The Incas even worshipped the flower, that served as the symbol of their sun god: Inti.
Throughout the centuries many products were made from this big flower. The North American Indians for example, made the seeds into flour, to make cakes or bread, or mixed the seeds up with some beans or corn. The flower buds were used as a dye for clothing or decoration. Medicines were also made from the sunflower, for snake bites for example. The long stems didn’t go to waste as well: it was used as a building material. This shows that every part of this plant was used to its maximum potential.
Not only is helianthus admired for its beauty and its many practical features, it is also the subject in some of the most famous paintings of the world. Between 1887 and 1889, Vincent van Gogh made multiple paintings featuring sunflowers. The sunflowers in his portraits show multiple stages of blossoming, from full bloom to withering symbolizing the circle of life and death.