
Jean-François Millet, Haystacks, 1868

Jean-François Millet, The Tower of Chailly near Barbizon, 1873

Jean-François Millet, Peasant and Donkey Returning Home at Dusk, 1868
How did the famous French peasant painter Jean-François Millet inspire the artists of the Hague School? Discover how Hague School painters such as Jozef Israëls, Anton Mauve and Willem Roelofs adopted elements of Millet’s distinct visual language, monumental poses and radical composition.
Jean-François Millet (1814-1875) is considered one of the most important artists from the Barbizon School. Hendrik Willem Mesdag and his contemporaries, such as Jozef Israëls, Willem Roelofs, Anton Mauve and Matthijs Maris, knew the Frenchman’s rural scenes well.
They were inspired by reproductions of Millet’s paintings, but certainly also by several significant works purchased by the Mesdags and displayed at their Museum Mesdag. When it came to depictions of nature and peasant life, the Dutch artists saw Millet as a shining example. His distinct visual language, monumental poses and radical composition can be found in all of their work.
Discover the oeuvre of Millet and the work of the numerous artists he inspired in our autumn exhibition.
This exhibition runs almost concurrently with the exhibition Jean-François Millet: Sowing the Seeds of Modern Art at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam (4 October 2019 to 12 January 2020), which explores Millet’s influence on modern art in general.
Jean-François Millet, Haystacks, 1868
Jean-François Millet, The Tower of Chailly near Barbizon, 1873
Jean-François Millet, Peasant and Donkey Returning Home at Dusk, 1868