Jean-Francois Millet (1814-1875)

Chasse aux oiseaux par lumire des torches (Hunting Birds by Torchlight)

Details
Jean-Francois Millet (1814-1875)
Chasse aux oiseaux par lumire des torches (Hunting Birds by Torchlight)
stamped with signature 'J.F. Millet' (Lugt 1816; lower left) (Robert L. Herbert's 1894G)
charcoal heightened with white chalk on rose-gray canvas
22.3/8 x 28 in. (57 x 71 cm.)
Provenance
Mme. J.F. Millet; Estate sale, Htel Drouot, Paris, 24-25 April 1894, lot 11
Flix Grard (acquired from the above sale)
Artemis Gallery, London
Acquired by the present owner, 1983
Literature
E. Moreau-Nlaton, Millet racont par lui-mme, Paris, 1921, vol. III, pp. 97, 104 and 125 (for discussion of the Philadelphia painting and sketches).
R.L. Herbert, Jean-Franois Millet, exh. cat., Grand Palais, Paris, 1975, p. 292.
Exhibited
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, Jean-Franois Millet, 1984, no. 152.
Sale room notice
Please note this drawing has been requested for an exhibition entitled, Drawn in the Light: Jean-Franois Millet.
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA (June 18 - September 7, 1999)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (October 26 - January 5, 2000)
Frick Art Museum, Pittsburgh (February 10 - April 23, 2000)

Lot Essay

Hunting Birds by Torchlight is one of the last works of Jean-Franois Millet, the under-drawing of an unfinished painting transformed by the dying artist into an astonishing creation of singular intensity. The composition of Hunting Birds by Torchlight records an event that had been buried in Millet's memory since his childhood in Normandy, some fifty years before; but it is the gestural force with which Millet pulled his figures out of a swirl of light and energy that gives the work such emotional power.

From William Low, a young American painter who visited Millet in his Barbizon studio during 1873-1874, we learn that Hunting Birds by Torchlight (along with the related painting, Bird Hunters, Philadelphia Museum of Art, which reverses the composition, fig. 1) depicts a scene out of the artist's early childhood on the Cotentin coast of Normandy. Millet spoke to Low of going out at night with other peasants of his tiny Gruchy hamlet to hunt the flocks of wild pigeons that migrated across the Channel. Carrying great torches to blind the startled birds, and swinging heavy clubs to stun them, the older men brought down the pigeons which children scrambling on the ground gathered up into sacks. For peasants living a hard existence, this communal hunt was one of the few sources of meat in a limited diet.

Without Low's testament for McClure's Magazine (May 1896), it would be very difficult to know what to make of Hunting Birds by Torchlight. The maelstrom of flickering torches, waving clubs, and spinning hunters is quite unlike anything else in the solid, stable rural world of Millet's art. For thirty-five years he had struggled to adapt traditional French artistic values emphasizing sculptural forms and clear narrative unity to the untraditional subjects of French peasant life. And side by side with Hunting Birds by Torchlight, Millet worked as well on the monumental Haystacks of the Metropolitan Museum of Art during the last months of his life. Yet in Hunting Birds, the certainties and spatial clarity of those works are set aside for an impenetrable space of shifting light and shadow in which two archetypal Millet subjects, the hard-working peasant and the beautiful birds of the field, come into direct and uneven conflict. As he faced his own death, Millet raged against the inevitability of fate and the blindness that commands so many of man's actions.

Millet worked out the positions of the figures in numerous small pen and ink sketches (Collection Cabinet des dessins, The Louvre, Paris; and others now lost) and in two fuller pencil and crayon compositions (Indianapolis Museum of Art and the London art market, 1980s) that record the fury with which Millet slashed in the flickering light of the background. Another under-drawing on canvas shows the figures in a smaller, more compact space.

We are grateful to Alexandra Murphy for her assistance in preparing this catalogue entry.
fig. 1 Jean Franois Millet, Bird Hunters, 1874
Philadelphia Museum of Art, William L. Elkins Collection