Portrait of Louise-Antoinette Feuardent (1841) by Jean-François MilletThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'Through a tightly controlled composition and a careful balance of monochromatic tones, Millet captured Louise-Antoinette's self-containment, reserve, and poised composure.'
Louise-Antoinette Feuardent (1841)The J. Paul Getty Museum
'Before Jean-François Millet achieved international success as a painter of peasant life, he earned his early living as a portraitist.'
The Sower (1850) by Jean-François MilletMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston
'Jean-François Millet was the artist that van Gogh most revered. Although he never saw Millet's famous Sower - already in a Boston collection before he was born - van Gogh admired Millet's other treatments of the theme, and sought to emulate them.'
Going to Work (1851 - 1853) by Jean-François Millet (French, b.1814, d.1875)Cincinnati Art Museum
'Born in Gruchy, France, to a family of farmers, Jean-François Millet referred to himself as the "painter of peasants." In 1837, as a student of the history painter Paul Delaroche, he met fellow pupil Théodore Rousseau.'
Baby's Slumber (ca.1855) by Jean-Francois MilletChrysler Museum of Art
'Millet's idealized image of maternal devotion and domestic harmony was meant to celebrate the virtues of the French peasant class--patience, diligence, perseverance--and the dignity and continuity of life on the land.'
"Le chat" or The Cat at the Window (about 1857–1858) by Jean-François MilletThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'In a wealth of tones hidden in deep shadows, Jean-François Millet evoked the story's haunting mystery.'
Man with a Hoe (Main View)The J. Paul Getty Museum
'"(A)s I have never seen anything but fields since I was born, I try to say as best I can what I saw and felt when I was at work," wrote Jean-François Millet.'
Shepherdess and Her Flock (about 1864–1865) by Jean-François MilletThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'He exhibited the painting, now in Paris's Musée d'Orsay, to great acclaim at the Salon of 1864.'
Portrait of Charles-André Langevin (1845) by Jean-François MilletMuMa - Musée d'art moderne André Malraux
'Upon the premature death of his wife, he left Cherbourg for Le Havre, in search of a new clientele. The Portrait of Charles-André Langevin belongs to a series of important figures from Le Havre painted by Millet in 1845.'