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Lot Essay
Léon Lhermitte was born in 1844 and was still executing works in the French rural tradition at his death in 1925, making him the last of an illustrious group of artists. He demonstrated his artistic talent at a young age and left his home in Mont-Saint-Père, Aisne for the Petite École in Paris where he studied with Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran. Lecoq was known for his insistence on training the visual memory of his students and his theories had a profound effect on the young Lhermitte. It was in the studio of Lecoq that Lhermitte began his life-long friendship with Jean Cazin, and it was also there that he made the acquaintance of Alphonse Legros, Henri Fantin-Latour and Auguste Rodin. Lhermitte sent his first entry to the Paris Salon in 1864 when he was nineteen and won his first medal in 1874 with La Moisson (Musée de Carcassonne). Throughout his long career he was awarded the Grand Prix at the Exposition universelle in 1889, the Diplome d’Honneur, Dresden and the Légion d'Honneur. He was also a founding member of the Société nationale des Beaux Arts. Throughout his career, Lhermitte remained devoted to the peasant as subject matter, which to him embodied the most fundamental and consistent element in human society. Although Lhermitte was well connected in artistic circles and was aware of both revolutionary artistic movements as well as the rapid industrial changes of his time, he both established and maintained his vocation as a painter of rural life. He was not alone in this choice. Jean Cazin, a close friend of Lhermitte, Julien Dupré, Jules Breton and Jules Bastien-Lepage all communicated through their work the pride, integrity and innocence that characterized the rural classes in the second half of the 19th century. It is clear the most profound influence upon his work was Jean-François Millet who was also equally adept with pastel as with oil. Lhermitte steadfastly remained true to his own artistic conscience, creating beautiful, light-filled works in the Barbizon tradition, reinforcing the dignity of peasant life and the glory of the French rural landscape in the face of encroaching technology. He was much admired by his peers, both those who remained entrenched in the Barbizon tradition as well as the innovators of the Impressionist movement. Vincent van Gogh wrote, ‘He (Lhermitte) is the absolute master of the figure, he does what he likes with it – proceeding neither from the colour nor the local tone but rather from the light – as Rembrandt did – there is an astonishing mastery in everything he does, above all excelling at modelling, he perfectly satisfies all that honesty demands’.
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