The Harvesters (painting)

The Harvesters
Artist Pieter Brueghel the Elder
Year 1565
Type Oil on wood
Dimensions 119 cm × 162 cm (46 78 in × 63 34 in)
Location Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

The Harvesters is an oil on wood painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder in 1565.

Painting

The painting is one in a series of six works, five of which are still extant, that depict different times of the year. As in many of his paintings, the focus is on peasants and their work. Notably, some of the peasants are shown eating while others are harvesting wheat, a diachronic (relating to phenomena such as ideas, language, or culture, as they occur or change over a period of time) depiction of both the production and consumption of food. Pears can be seen on the white cloth in front of the upright sitting woman who eats bread and cheese while a figure in the tree to the far right picks pears.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art calls this painting a “watershed in the history of Western art”[1] and the “first modern landscape”.[2] A sense of distance is conveyed by the workers carrying sheaves of wheat through the clearing, the people bathing in the pond, the children playing and the ships far away.

In the center left of the painting, a group of villagers can be seen participating in the blood sport of cock throwing.[3]

The painting has been at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City since 1919.[4]

References

  1. "Pieter Bruegel the Elder: The Harvesters (19.164)". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 2014. OCLC 49730187. Archived from the original on 2015-09-05. Through his remarkable sensitivity to nature’s workings, Bruegel created a watershed in the history of Western art, suppressing the religious and iconographic associations of earlier depictions of the seasons in favor of an unidealized vision of landscape.
  2. "MetMedia: The Harvesters". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York. Archived from the original on 2015-10-03. It’s a landscape that’s really the first modern landscape in Western art. Bruegel has inserted a completely coherent middle ground, and it increases both our engagement with the landscape—he puts us into the landscape along with the peasants walking down those paths—and the sense of a measurable distance.
  3. Brown, Mark (2011-02-01). "Google Art Project aims to shed new light on classic works of art". The Guardian.
  4. "Pieter Bruegel the Elder: The Harvesters". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015.

Further reading

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External links

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