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Artist
Creation date
1848-1852
Materials
oil on canvas
Dimensions
17 7/8 x 14 7/8 in.
Credit line
The James E. Roberts Fund and gift of the Alumni Association of the John Herron Art School
Accession number
49.48
Collection
Currently On View In
Norb and Ruth Schaefer, Sr. & Norb and Carolyn Schaefer Gallery - H211
Millet was a leading member of the Barbizon School of painters, which rose to prominence around 1850. Often working directly from nature, these artists devoted themselves to painting landscapes in the vicinity of the village of Barbizon and the forest of Fontainebleau, where Millet moved in 1849.
Millet often depicted scenes of peasants at work, and his knowledge of classical art helped him to create dignified, idealized images of laborers in the French countryside. With his simple farm tools and clothing, the peasant pushing his cart becomes a timeless symbol of a rapidly disappearing rural way of life.
Acquired from (E. and A. Silberman Galleries, New York) in April 1949.{1}
{1} IMA Temporary Receipt No. 5259.
{1} IMA Temporary Receipt No. 5259.
