LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (MONT-SAINT-PÈRE 1844-1925 PARIS)
LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (MONT-SAINT-PÈRE 1844-1925 PARIS)
LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (MONT-SAINT-PÈRE 1844-1925 PARIS)
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LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (MONT-SAINT-PÈRE 1844-1925 PARIS)

La sieste àla ferme des Grèves

细节
LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (MONT-SAINT-PÈRE 1844-1925 PARIS)
La sieste àla ferme des Grèves
indistinctly signed 'L.Lhermitte' (lower right)
pastel on paper laid down on canvas
19 5⁄8 x 16 5⁄8 in. (39 x 54.5 cm.)
来源
with Boussod, Valadon & Cie, Paris (no. 13369),
Purchased from the above by W. Slater,
Anonymous sale; The Potomack Company, Alexandria, USA, 8 February 2024, lot 1001.
Purchased from the above sale by the present owner.
出版
A. Dalligny, Journal des arts, 13 April, 1888.
M. L. P. Fonteny, Catalogue raisonné de Léon-Augustin Lhermitte (1844-1925), Paris, 1991, p. 290, no. 257
展览
Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, Exposition de la Société des Pastellistes français, April 1888, (possibly no. 82).

荣誉呈献

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

拍品专文

In 1885 Vincent van Gogh wrote a letter to his brother Theo which praised Lhermitte as the ‘master of the figure. He’s able to do what he likes with it — conceiving the whole neither from the colour nor from the local tone, but rather proceeding from the light — as Rembrandt did — there’s something astonishingly masterly in everything he does — in modelling, above all things, he utterly satisfies the demands of honesty' (letter 531, 2 September 1885). In another letter the following month, writing a defence of the greatness of modern art, van Gogh compared Millet and Lhermitte to Michelangelo and Rembrandt, ranking them all as geniuses. 'In the work of Millet, of Lhermitte,’ van Gogh wrote, ‘all reality is also symbolic at the same time. They’re something other than what people call realists’ (letter 533, 4 October 1885).

Lhermitte's early training took place in the atelier of Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran, whose students included Legros and Fantin-Latour. He studied the compositions of the Barbizon painters Corot, Millet, Breton and Daubigny, and developed a faculty for rendering physical form by varying the gradations of light and dark, maximizing the effect of shadow in the modelling of his subjects. At his death in 1925, Lhermitte was the last of this illustrious group of the Barbizon painters executing works in the French rural tradition.

Art critic Maurice Hammel compared Lhermitte's robust and often monumental depictions of the peasant to the imagery of Rodin. Lhermitte's peasants are actual, identifiable people from his village, unlike those of Millet's who are in a constant struggle with nature and are personifications rather than individuals. In addition to their strong physique, Lhermitte also portrayed the country folk at work and proud of their toil, creating a romantic nostalgia. The poses of his peasants are often borrowed from the old masters as well as ancient Greek sculptures. This allowed Lhermitte to create a visual vocabulary that was rooted in the classic and elevated his subjects - the local peasantry - to a more refined position. In Lhermitte's work, the landscapes are filled with light, colour and atmosphere and these figures resting from their labours are idealized and dignified. Ignoring the Industrial Revolution and focussing on the image of a society prior to its emergence, Lhermitte's peasants are a visualization of paradise lost for the citizens of large metropolises.

We are grateful to the Comité Lhermitte who have kindly confirmed the authenticity of this work. The work is sold with a certificate of authenticity from the Comité.

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