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Artist Biography
Jean Francois Millet (1814-1875),
French
French
painter, who came of a peasant family, was born on the 4th of October 1814
in the hamlet of Gruchy, near Greville (La Manche), in the wild and
picturesque district called La Hague. His boyhood was passed working in
his father's fields, but the sight of the engravings in an old illustrated
Bible set him drawing, and thenceforth, whilst the others slept, the daily
hour of rest was spent by Millet in trying to render the familiar scenes
around him. From the village priest the lad learnt to read the Bible and
Virgil in Latin, and acquired an interest in one or two other works of a
high class which accompanied him through life; he did not, however,
attract attention so much by his acquirements as by the stamp of his mind.
The whole family seems, indeed, to have worn a character of austerity and
dignity, and when Millet's father finally decided to test the vocation of
his son as an artist, it was with a gravity and authority which recalls
the patriarchal households of Calvinist France. Two drawings were prepared
and placed before a painter at Cherbourg named Bon Du Mouchel, who at once
recognized the boy's gifts, and accepted him as a pupil; but shortly after
(1835) Millet's father died, and the eldest son, with heroic devotion,
took his place at home, nor did he return to his work until the pressing
calls from without were solemnly enforced by the wishes of his own family.
He accordingly went back to Cherbourg,
but after a short time spent there with another master (Lucien-Thohile Langlois) started with many
misgivings for Paris.
The council-general of the department had granted him a sum of 600 francs,
and the town council promised an annual pension of 400, but in spite of
friendly help and introductions Millet went through great difficulties.
The system of the Ecole des Beaux Arts was hateful to him, and it was not
until after much hesitation that he decided to enter an official studio,
that of
Delaroche. The master was
certainly puzzled by his pupil; he saw his ability, and, when Millet in
his poverty could not longer pay the monthly fees, arranged for his free
admission to the studio, but he tried in vain to make him take the
approved direction, and lessons ended with "Eh, bien, allez a votre guise,
vous htes (?) si nouveau pour moi que je ne veux rien vous dire" ("Eh,
well, go have your own way, you (?) so new to me that I have nothing to
say to you"). At last, when the competition for the Grand Prix came on,
Delaroche gave Millet to understand that he intended to secure the
nomination of another, and thereupon Millet withdrew himself, and with his
friend Marolle started in a little studio in the Rue de l'Est. He had
renounced the beaten track, but he continued to study hard whilst he
sought to procure bread by painting portraits at 10 or 15 francs apiece
and producing small pastiches of
Watteau and
Boucher. In 1840 Millet
went back to Greville, where he painted Sailors Mending a Sail and
a few other picture reminiscences of Cherbourg life.
His first success was obtained in 1844, when his Milkwoman and
Lesson in Riding (pastel) attracted notice at the Salon, and friendly
artists presented themselves at his lodgings only to learn that his wife
had just died, and that he himself had disappeared. Millet was at
Cherbourg; there he remarried, but having amassed a few hundred francs he
went back to Paris and presented his
St Jerome
at the Salon of 1845. This picture was rejected and exists no longer, for
Millet, short of canvas, painted over it Oedipus Unbound, a work
which during the following year was the object of violent criticism. He
was, however, no longer alone;
Diaz, Eugene Tourneux,
Rousseau, and other men of
note supported him by their confidence and friendship, and he had by his
side the brave Catherine Lemaire, his second wife, a woman who bore
poverty with dignity and gave courage to her husband through the cruel
trials in which he penetrated by a terrible personal experience the bitter
secrets of the very poor. To this date belong Millet's Golden Age,
Bird Nesters, Young Girl and Lamb, and Bathers; but
to the Bathers (Louvre) succeeded The Mother Asking Alms,
The Workmans' Monday, and The Winnower. This last work,
exhibited in 5848, obtained conspicuous success, but did not sell till
Ledru Rollin, informed of the painter's dire distress, gave him 500 francs
for it, and accompanied the purchase with a commission, the money for
which enabled Millet to leave Paris for Barbizon, a village on the skirts
of the forest
of Fontainebleau. There he settled in a three-roomed cottage for the rest
of his life of twenty-seven years, in which he wrought out the perfect
story of that peasant life of which he alone has given a complete
impression.
Jules Breton has coloured
the days of toil with sentiment; others, like
Courbet, whose eccentric
Funeral at Ornans attracted more notice at the Salon of 1850 than
Millet's Sowers and Binders, have treated similar subjects
as a vehicle for protest against social misery; Millet alone, a peasant
and a miserable one himself, saw true, neither softening nor exaggerating
what he saw. In a curious letter written to M. Sensier at this date (1850)
Millet expressed his resolve to break once and for all with mythological
and undraped subjects, and the names of the principal works painted
subsequently will show how steadfastly this resolution was kept. In 1852
he produced Girls Sewing, Man Spreading Manure (1853),
The Reapers (1854), Church at Greville (1855) the year of the
International Exhibition, at which he received a medal of second class
Peasant Grafting a Tree (1857), The Gleaners (1859), The
Angelus, The Woodcutter and Death (1860), Sheep Shearing
(1861), Woman Shearing Sheep, Woman Feeding Child (1862),
Potato Planters, Winter and the Crows (1863), Man with Hoe,
Woman Carding (1864), Shepherds and Flock, Peasants
Bringing Home a Calf Born in the Fields (1869), Knitting Lesson
(1870), Buttermaking (1871), November recollection of Gruchy.
Any one of these works will show how great an influence Millet's previous
practice in the nude had upon his style. The dresses worn by his figures
are not clothes, but drapery through which the forms and movements of the
body are strongly felt, and their contour shows a grand breadth of line
which strikes the eye at once. Something of the imposing unity of his work
was also, no doubt, due to an extraordinary power of memory, which enabled
Millet to paint (like
Horace Vernet) without a
model; he could recall with precision the smallest details of attitudes or
gestures which he proposed to represent. Thus he could count on presenting
free from afterthoughts the vivid impressions which he had first received,
and Millet's nature was such that the impressions which he received were
always of a serious and often of a noble order, to which the character of
his execution responded so perfectly that even a Washerwoman at her Tub
will show the grand action of a Medea. The drawing of this subject is
reproduced in Souvenirs de Barbizon, a pamphlet in which M.
Pidagnel has recorded a visit paid to Millet in 1864. His circumstances
were then less evil, after struggles as severe as those endured in Paris.
A contract by which he bound himself in 1860 to give up all his work for
three years had placed him in possession of 1000 francs a month. His fame
extended, and at the exhibition of 1867 he received a medal of the first
class, and the ribbon of the Legion of Honour, but he was at the same
moment deeply shaken by the death of his faithful friend Rousseau. Though
he rallied for a time he never completely recovered his health, and on the
20th of January 1875 he died. He was buried by his friends side in the churchyard of
Chailly. His pictures, like those of the rest of the
Barbizon
school, have since greatly .increased in value.
Jean Francois Millet
Oil
Paintings Reproductions:
Planting Potatoes 70cm x 90cm (28" x 36") $319 The Gleaners 60cm x 90cm (24" x 36") $299 Walkwork 70cm x 55cm (28" x 22") $259 Young Shepherdess 70cm x 45cm (28" x 18") $249
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