Welcome to One Positive Present, the place Observer highlights a lately opened exhibition at a museum not in New York Metropolis, a spot we all know and love that already receives loads of consideration.
Nowadays, it appears like everybody I do know professes to crave the outside. They’re all so uninterested in town—its comforts, its tradition, its type, its enlightenments, its individuals, its alternatives. Although they name an Uber when the stroll is larger than 10 blocks, they profess to wish to hike the Catskills, the Dolomites, the Alps. They inform me they’ll elevate chickens at their rustic getaway dwelling, although I’m fairly positive they can not cook dinner an egg.
One of many causes I benefit from the work of Jean-François Millet (1814-1875) is that he engages in none of this romanticism about areas outlined by vegetation and dust. “Millet: Life on the Land,” a brand new present at London’s Nationwide Gallery that coincides with the a hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the French artist’s demise, brings collectively 15 work and drawings. It’s a smaller present however packs a punch.
Millet was much less within the landscapes than he was within the individuals who labored them. That is finest demonstrated by the portray on the coronary heart of this exhibition, L’Angélus (1857-9) from the Musée d’Orsay, Paris. In it, two employees bow their heads to say the prayer within the title on the finish of an extended day within the subject. Till re-examining it for this column, I hadn’t remembered that the 6 p.m. solar really isn’t seen within the work itself, it’s simply outdoors the canvas. This speaks to the best way it infuses each different facet of the work, from the right clouds all the way down to the bales of hay, the standard outfits of the employees, and the curiously curved pitchfork. What a benediction certainly.
Different standouts within the present embrace The Winnower (1847-8), which exhibits a shadow-faced man shaking wheat from his basket. Many of the works on this exhibition, nonetheless, come from after 1849, when Millet left Paris for the village of Barbizon. This city within the Fontainebleau Forest would lend its title to a college of portray he based that strove to seize the sincere work of the land. One other nice one for me is The Milkmaid (c. 1853), wherein a lady with an ingenious carrying contraption walks dwelling boldly by tough terrain.
I’d examine this present to the current exhibition “Caspar David Friedrich: The Soul of Nature” on the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork. Friedrich noticed God in nature, and when he put human figures in his portray, they have been rendered humble by it. Millet’s angle was no much less sentimental, grandiose, or non secular, however extra involved with human dignity. With all due respect to Friedrich and my associates scaling the Pyrenees, I believe we might all do with slightly extra realism lately. Till then, there’s at all times the upstate SoHo Home.
“Millet: Life on the Land” is on view at The Nationwide Gallery in London by October 19, 2025.
Extra exhibition critiques