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Drawn into the Light: Jean-François Millet

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Few artists of the nineteenth century created works as subtly evocative, as socially poignant, and as artistically influential as Jean-Francois Millet. This book examines Millet's technical and creative achievement, focusing on his rarely seen pastels, watercolors, and drawings, considering them as independent works of art, as procedural steps toward paintings, and as important elements in his finished pictures.Alexandra Murphy explores the ways that Millet reinvented his art and reshaped the course of nineteenth-century painting in the process. Through his shift away from idealized nudes of the academic tradition to nudes in a real world, his confrontation with the physical landscape of work, and his perception of light and weather conditions that altered the landscape, Millet's pastels, watercolors, and drawings had a profound impact on his artistic contemporaries. Counted among his particular admirers were Degas, Seurat, Pissarro, Gauguin, and Van Gogh, who described an exhibition of Millet's pastels as "holy ground". In this context, Murphy discusses Millet's most famous painting, The Gleaners, which not only represents a technical and aesthetic achievement but also serves as an essential symbol of the political causes of the time: Millet's peasants have held their place in social history, she says, because they are so beautifully drawn that their gestures speak across decades, nations, and cultures.

150 pages, Hardcover

First published May 11, 1999

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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2,041 reviews87 followers
October 4, 2010
Gorgeous book for Millet admirers. "Flight of Crows", "The Sower", "The Departure" - a few of my favorites. Millet's themes; farmers and peasants going about their labour - shepherds, a woman churning butter, carding wool, baking bread. The colours of sunset seem always to be in his palette. I love his work.
16 reviews
July 3, 2022
Wonderful! Each drawing is elaborated in detail to depict the socio-economic state of the 18th century.
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