The Gleaners by Jean-Francois Millet

Jean-François Millet, 1857, Oil On Canvas, Musée d’Orsay, Paris

When I first saw The Gleaners I was struck by its size, as it measures approximately three feet by three-and-a-half feet. The three monumental women in the foreground drew me in. They are fully absorbed in their work of picking up the bits of grain that remain after a field has been harvested.

The Gleaners depicts peasant women gleaning wheat for themselves at sunset when only stray stalks are left to gather. The artist, Jean-François Millet, portrayed these workers in a very real and sympathetic light, communicating through his oil painting the exhausting work poor agricultural laborers had to do to survive in mid-1800s France. He took what his society at the time considered the lowest ranks in rural life and elevated them through art to a status equal to the middle and upper classes. Feeling threatened by this, the prosperous classes in France did not appreciate Millet’s painting when he unveiled it.

Millet was, in fact, an integral part of the Realism art movement, where the focus was on portraying scenes truthfully. Having grown up on a farm, he neither romanticized country life nor hid it from view. He knew firsthand what it meant to be an integral part of a farming community working the fields. In The Gleaners, Millet aptly portrays an everyday scene of people struggling to survive. Gleaning was a practice landowners allowed the poor to do once their rich harvests had been collected. High society may have looked down on gleaning, but Millet brought out the dignity of the gleaners and the life-and-death seriousness of their work.

In the painting the colors of the field and sky are soft and muted, although there is a golden hue that re-flects the sacredness of the land. The abundant harvest can be seen in the background, along with a field supervisor on horseback and laborers standing around. The gleaners, however, ignore the bounty in the distance. Their attention is fully upon the task of gleaning, since without the grain that they gather it will be challenging for them to survive the upcoming winter.

These workers emanate genuineness. They’re not distracted by the piles of grain or the activities of the farm-hands. Engrossed in the backbreaking work of locating and gathering meager leftovers, the three women keep close to each other in their solitary work yet remain removed from the rest of the scene.

By placing them in the foreground, making them large and substantial, Millet has tipped the scales, turning the gleaners that society preferred to ignore into the focus of attention. While their work clothes are dusty, colorful accents help them stand out.

Millet’s painting was received poorly when it debuted. People did not like having poverty stare back at them in art salons. Eventually sentiment changed, and by the late 1800s The Gleaners began to cultivate recognition and appreciation.

Have you ever had to do work that others looked down upon or did not appreciate? Perhaps one of the lessons of Millet’s painting is that there is no shame in doing what we must to survive. All work matters. Dignity and nobility exist in all walks of life, and we can be proud of the work we do regardless of what others may think. After all, they don’t walk in our shoes.

Farmhouses by Gabriel Munter

Gabriel Munter, c.1935, oil on canvas, San Diego Museum of Art

My first reaction to Farmhouses is a feeling of quietude, stillness, and warmth—the warm colors, the rhythm of undulating mountains—all create a feeling of peace within. Yellow predominates the painting, conveying a spirituality in ones inner world.

While on a road trip through Bavaria, Germany in the fall of 2003, I spotted a road sign that read “Murnau.” It jolted my memory, reminding me that the German Expressionist painter Gabriele Münter had lived there. My friend and I took a back road to the town and found her house, which is now a museum. I was elated! Unfortunately, the museum was closed, but I was still thrilled to be standing in the region she loved so much. I also feel fortunate that one of her paintings, Farmhouses, is in a collection in my own backyard, the San Diego Museum of Art.

Born in Berlin in 1877, Münter was a lifelong artist who focused on painting, printmaking, and photography. In her twenties, she was unable to attend official art academies in Germany because women were excluded from these schools, but that did not impede her creative endeavors. Münter pursued alternative directions for her training, embracing more radical shifts in the art world. She drew inspiration from pure shapes, bright palettes, and flat planes of color. Her goal was to capture on canvas fleeting moments of life; her artwork is a collection of visual experiences interpreted through vivid hues and bold outlines.

Both a student and a pioneer of Expressionism, the movement that seeks to convey an emotional experience or response through the arts, Münter was at the forefront of the avant-garde in Germany during the early 1900s. Drawn to landscapes, she used color and simplicity to communicate a variety of moods and feelings.

When you reflect upon Farmhouses, what feelings arise? Does this artwork take you to a particular place or time? In what ways do you resonate with the colors and shapes?

It is safe to say that through her art, Münter searched for higher meaning. She believed in a level of abstraction in art, creating fields of color and curved lines, outlining the shapes in black. The result is poetic.

She played a large part in advancing and preserving the Expressionist movement. As a founding member of Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider), a group of artists who rejected strict traditionalism in favor of art as a means to express spiritual truths, Münter evolved from painting what she saw to manifesting what she felt. Later in her career, during World War II, she hid works made by her and other Expressionist artists in her home, protecting them against Nazi raids. In 1957, at the age of 80, she gave her entire art collection to a museum in Munich.

Farmhouses and other works by Münter utilize colors and shapes to convey spirituality in art and reflect the richness of our inner worlds. They remind us that there’s more to life than what meets the eye, and each of us can experience the physical world through our feelings, impressions, and intuition as we seek our own spiritual truths.