The Sower (Millet)
The Sower is an oil painting by the French artist Jean-François Millet from 1850. Millet drew two almost the same paintings called The Sower. One of them has been part of collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston since 1917.[1] The other is part of collection of Yamanashi Prefectural Art Museum in Kofu (Japan).[2]
The Sower | |
---|---|
French: Le Semeur | |
Artist | Jean-François Millet |
Year | 1850 |
Type | Oil painting on canvas |
Dimensions | 101.6 cm × 82.6 cm (40.0 in × 32.5 in) |
Location | Museum of Fine Arts (Boston)/ Yamanashi Prefectural Art Museum (Kofu) |
History
Millet moved to Barbizon in 1849, a village in the Fontainebleau forest, outside Paris. There he was part of the artist group of the School of Barbizon, which painted subdued realistic landscapes and motifs in contrast to the traditional romantic dramatic landscape and painting. Millet was himself a farmer's son and described with dignity and seriousness the hard-working life of the rural population. His paintings have sometimes been perceived as sentimental. At the time, however, they were considered radical because of their social realism. Large-scale depiction of simple agricultural workers was new and controversial in the Paris' art establishment. Millet was often questioned for his "ugly" motifs.[3]
Description
The painting depicts a peasant in the act of sowing land, apparently in winter. The Sun shines at the top of the painting, which indicates that it is dawn. The sower is dressed in a typical peasant's attire, with his legs draped in straw to provide more warmth, walking in long strides, and carrying a bag of seeds over his shoulder, while he is in the act of sowing his crops with the right hand. At the left of the painting several crows appear scavenging the crops. At the right side, in the distance a man is seen plowing the ground with his oxen for the sowers work. The painting is an unidealized depiction of the peasant's strength and hardworking lifestyle.
The Sower was the first major painting that Millet made in Barbizon. He exhibited it at the Paris Salon in 1850 where it received much attention and criticism. Critic Clément de Ris praised it as "an energetic study full of movement", while Théophile Gautier derided it as "trowel scrapings".
Art historian Anthea Callen stated that "Millet intentionally transformed his human laborer into a sinewy giant of a man by elongating his proportions ... Reinforced by the sower's dominance of the pictorial space and our low viewpoint, his menacing appearance to the Parisian bourgeoisie in 1850 is thus readily explicable."[4]
Millet returned to the same motif at least three times. A second oil version painted after 1850 is held of the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Two pastel versions are held at the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, from around 1850, and at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, from around 1865.
Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh found inspiration in Millet's paintings of agricultural landscapes and farm workers. He copied The Sower in several of his own paintings, but transformed the image by using brighter colors.
References
- "The Sower". The Sower - Works - Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Archived from the original on 28 April 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
- "The collection of Yamanashi Prefectural Art Museum". Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- "The Sower by Jean-François Millet". www.thehistoryofart.org. Archived from the original on 1 August 2022. Retrieved 2022-08-01.
- "Millet Paintings, Bio, Ideas". The Art Story. Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 2022-08-01.