Skip to main content
Loading...Loading...

Paysanne enfournant son pain

A Woman Baking Bread

Jean-François Millet (1814 - 1875)

  • Date

    1854

  • Material

    Oil on canvas

  • Extent

    55 × 46 cm

  • Type

    Schilderijen

  • Identifier

    KM 109.591

Barbizon School

Millet was born in Gruchy, a village in Normandy. Throughout his life, he remains proud of his peasant background and often chooses rural life as the theme of his work. In 1849, together with other artists, he settles in Barbizon, a pretty village in the forest near Fontainebleau, to the southeast of Paris. As a group they acquire the name Barbizon School and become well-known for their realistic-romantic landscapes.

Peasant life

Millet paints mainly the people who live and work in these landscapes. Until then, depictions of peasants and their wives in art were nothing more than a decorative element in picturesque or nostalgic scenes. Millet breaks with that tradition. He paints the men and women in a way that is simultaneously realistic and heroic, as large figures deeply connected to the land, like this imposing woman baking bread. He aims to depict the honesty and simplicity of peasant life.

Influence

Millet’s work is highly influential in the art of the 19th century. Vincent van Gogh, for instance, is well acquainted with his paintings and drawings and takes inspiration from them time and again.

Man looking at a painting in a museum gallery together with three children of different ages.

Discover more than 20,000 works of art

View the full collection

Kröller-Müller Museum

Houtkampweg 6, Otterlo, The Netherlands

Route and parking

Open Tuesday to Sunday and public holidays from 10.00-17.00 hrs. Closed on 1 January.

Monday 6 July until 24 August: 10.00-17.00 hrs.

More about opening hours

Footer logo