Camille Pissarro, throughout his career, painted scenes of landscapes as well as the everyday tasks performed by the rural community. In his early artworks, the agricultural workers in his paintings appear as a natural part of the landscape.
Whereas in his later years, the workers are placed well into the foreground. His paintings focused more on the composition of figures rather than a landscape.
Our Hay Harvest by Camille Pissarro Virtual Tour includes:
- “Hay Harvest at Éragny” by Camille Pissarro – National Gallery of Canada
- La Récolte des Foins, Éragny by Camille Pissarro – Van Gogh Museum
- “The Harvest, Pontoise” by Camille Pissarro – Metropolitan Museum of Art
- “The Hay Cart, Montfoucault” by Camille Pissarro – Kawamura Memorial DIC Museum of Art
- “The Harvest” by Camille Pissarro – National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
“Hay Harvest at Éragny” by Camille Pissarro
“Hay Harvest at Éragny” by Camille Pissarro is a 1901 painting by the Impressionist painter depicting the hay harvest in the French commune of Éragny-sur-Epte.
Hay since ancient times was cut and dried to be stored for use as animal fodder, particularly for grazing animals raised as livestock, such as cattle, horses, goats, and sheep.
Hay is stilled used as animal fodder when there is not enough pasture on which to graze an animal or when grazing is not feasible due to weather.
Hay Harvest at Éragny
- Title: Hay Harvest at Éragny
- French: Fenaison à Éragny
- Artist: Camille Pissarro
- Year: 1901
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 53.9 cm (21.2 in); Width: 64.7 cm (25.4 in)
- Museum: National Gallery of Canada
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La Récolte des Foins, Éragny by Camille Pissarro
La Récolte des Foins, Éragny by Camille Pissarro
La Récolte des Foins, Éragny by Camille Pissarro, depicts the bustling haying season in rural Éragny, where Pissarro lived with his family from 1884 until he died in 1903.
Pissarro used his interpretation of pointillism to enhance the color and luminosity of his work. From a distance, Pissarro’s systematic dots and dabs, form a unity and increase the painting’s light and color intensity.
The theme of hay gathering recurs in Pissarro’s oeuvre in several media, including pencil, gouache, oil, and prints over thirty years.
Camille Corot influenced Pissarro in his subject matter of agricultural workers. He, in turn, influenced the more staccato, broken brushwork of later artists such as Georges Seurat.
Pont Boieldieu in Rouen, Rainy Weather
- Title: La Récolte des Foins
- Artist: Camille Pissarro
- Year: 1887
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 50 cm (19.6 in); Width: 66 cm (25.9 in)
- Museum: Van Gogh Museum
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“The Harvest, Pontoise” by Camille Pissarro
“The Harvest, Pontoise” by Camille Pissarro
“The Harvest, Pontoise” by Camille Pissarro depicts a group of French farmers gathering potatoes. The harvest was a common theme used by Pissarro.
Pissarro’s treatment of harvesters in Pontoise is carefully structured while expressive in tone and brushwork.
Pissarro was a painter with passionate political beliefs and preferred country life rather than the city.
He saw more equality amongst living amongst the rural workers, who he greatly respected.
Pissarro saw similarities between the labors of his art and the physical work done in the fields. Many of his works reflect his interest in the pride that came from such rural labor.
The Harvest, Pontoise
- Title: The Harvest, Pontoise
- French: La Récolte, Pontoise
- Artist: Camille Pissarro
- Year: 1881
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 46.1 cm (18.1 in); Width: 55.2 cm (21.7 in)
- Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art
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“The Hay Cart, Montfoucault” by Camille Pissarro
“The Hay Cart, Montfoucault” by Camille Pissarro
“The Hay Cart, Montfoucault” by Camille Pissarro shows the transportation of the hay harvest. Methods for making hay have varied dramatically throughout history, and many regional variations still exist today.
Early farmers noticed that growing fields produced more fodder in the spring than the animals could consume and that cutting the grass in the summer, allowing it to dry and store it for the winter, provided their animals with better quality nutrition.
On some farms, the loose hay was stored in a barn, generally in such a way that it would compress down and cure. The “haycart” or wagon was used to collect and transport the hay.
The Hay Cart, Montfoucault
- Title: The Hay Cart, Montfoucault
- Artist: Camille Pissarro
- Year: 1879
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 45.3 cm (17.8 in); Width: 55.3 cm (21.7 in)
- Museum: Kawamura Memorial DIC Museum of Art
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“The Harvest” by Camille Pissarro
“The Harvest” by Camille Pissarro
“The Harvest” by Camille Pissarro depicts the work in a wheat field that covers the entire canvas. The painting presents a scene of wheat harvesting in Pontoise, a quiet village on the outskirts of Paris.
By the 1840s, this area was connected to Paris by train, and it became the home for Pissarro. He set up his studio in the area on two occasions, in 1866-68, and then again in 1872-82.
This work was created towards the end of Pissarro’s second residence in Pontoise. During this period, he focused his attention on the workers depicting them with a psychological understanding.
The woman holding a sheaf of harvested wheat in the left foreground and a woman bent over next to her, demonstrated Pissarro’s interest on the human impact of work and the environment.
At this point, Pissarro was moving beyond the Impressionist trend of just focusing on nature and brought a new form of dynamism to his compositions.
Many preparatory works for Pissarro’s works have survived, which demonstrates how he spent many hours carefully creating this work.
His methods were more laborious than the “Impressionistic” production method of creating works in a relatively short time.
The Harvest
- Title: The Harvest
- Artist: Camille Pissarro
- Year: 1882
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 703 mm (27.67 in); Width: 1,260 mm (49.60 in)
- Museum: National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Camille Pissarro
Camille Pissarro (1830 – 1903) made significant contributions to both Impressionism and Post-Impressionism. Pissarro friendships included many Impressionist artists, including Cézanne, Monet, Manet, Renoir, and Degas.
He is the only artist to have shown his work at all eight Paris Impressionist exhibitions, from 1874 to 1886.
He acted as a father figure not only to the Impressionists but also to the significant Post-Impressionists, including Georges Seurat, Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin.
Camille Pissarro
- Name: Jacob Abraham Camille Pissarro
- Born: 1830 – Saint Thomas, Danish West Indies (now U.S. Virgin Islands)
- Died: 1903 (aged 73) – Paris, France
- Nationality: Danish-French
- Movement: Impressionism, Post-Impressionism
- Notable works:
- Boulevard Montmartre Series
- Boulevard Montmartre: Afternoon, Sunshine
- The Boulevard Montmartre on a Winter Morning
- Boulevard Montmartre at Night
- Pont Boieldieu in Rouen
- The Pont Boieldieu at Sunset
- Pont Boieldieu in Rouen, Rainy Weather
- Morning, An Overcast Day, Rouen
- The Pont Boieldieu in Rouen, sunset, foggy weather
- Hay Harvest
- Hay Harvest at Éragny
- La Récolte des Foins, Éragny
- The Harvest, Pontoise
- The Hay Cart, Montfoucaul
- Boulevard Montmartre Series
Paintings by Camille Pissarro
A Tour of Artists
- Duccio (1255 – 1319)
- Jan van Eyck (1390 – 1441)
- Giovanni Bellini (1430 – 1516)
- Sandro Botticelli (1445 – 1510)
- Domenico Ghirlandaio (1448 – 1494)
- Leonardo da Vinci (1452 – 1519)
- Albrecht Durer (1471 – 1528)
- Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472 – 1553)
- Michelangelo (1475 – 1564)
- Raphael (1483 – 1520)
- Titian (1488 – 1576)
- Hans Holbein the Younger (1497 – 1543)
- Tintoretto (1518 – 1594)
- Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1525 – 1569)
- Paolo Veronese (1528 – 1588)
- El Greco (1541 – 1614)
- Caravaggio (1571 – 1610)
- Peter Paul Rubens (1577 – 1640)
- Georges de La Tour (1593 – 1652)
- Artemisia Gentileschi (1593 – 1656)
- Anthony van Dyck (1599 – 1641)
- Nicolas Poussin (1594 – 1665)
- Diego Velázquez (1599 – 1660)
- Rembrandt (1606 – 1669)
- Pieter de Hooch (1629 – 1684)
- Johannes Vermeer (1632 – 1675)
- Élisabeth Sophie Chéron (1648 – 1711)
- Canaletto (1697 – 1768)
- François Boucher (1703 – 1770)
- Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732 – 1806)
- John Singleton Copley (1738 – 1815)
- Benjamin West (1738 – 1820)
- Angelica Kauffman (1741 – 1807)
- Francisco Goya (1746 – 1828)
- Jacques-Louis David (1748 – 1825)
- Antonio Canova (1757 – 1822)
- Katsushika Hokusai ( 1760 – 1849)
- Caspar David Friedrich (1774 – 1840)
- J.M.W. Turner (1775 – 1851)
- Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780 – 1867)
- William Etty (1787 – 1849)
- Eugène Delacroix (1798 – 1863)
- George Caleb Bingham (1811 – 1879)
- Rosa Bonheur (1822 – 1899)
- Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824 – 1904)
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828 – 1882)
- John Everett Millais (1829 – 1896)
- Frederic Leighton (1830 – 1896)
- Camille Pissarro (1830 – 1903 )
- Édouard Manet (1832 – 1883)
- James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834 – 1903)
- Edgar Degas (1834 – 1917)
- James Tissot (1836 – 1902)
- Winslow Homer (1836 – 1910)
- Paul Cézanne (1839 – 1906)
- Auguste Rodin (1840 – 1917)
- Claude Monet (1840 – 1926)
- Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841 – 1919)
- Berthe Morisot (1841 – 1895)
- Henri Rousseau (1844 – 1910)
- Mary Cassatt (1844 – 1926)
- Elizabeth Thompson (1846 – 1933)
- Gustave Caillebotte (1848 – 1894)
- Paul Gauguin (1848 – 1903)
- John William Waterhouse (1849 – 1917)
- Jean Béraud (1849 – 1935)
- Vincent van Gogh (1853 – 1890)
- Frederick McCubbin (1855 – 1917)
- John Singer Sargent (1856 – 1925)
- Tom Roberts (1856 – 1931)
- Lovis Corinth (1858 – 1925)
- Georges Seurat (1859 – 1891)
- Gustav Klimt (1862 – 1918)
- Edvard Munch (1863 – 1944)
- Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864 – 1901)
- Rupert Bunny (1864 – 1947)
- Wassily Kandinsky (1866 – 1944)
- Arthur Streeton (1867 – 1943)
- Pierre Bonnard (1867 – 1947)
- Franz Marc (1880 – 1916)
- Goyō Hashiguchi (1880 – 1921)
- George Bellows (1882 – 1925)
- Edward Hopper (1882 – 1967)
- Amedeo Modigliani (1884 – 1920)
- Fernando Botero (born 1932)
- Artists and their Art
- Women in the Arts
- Famous French Painters You Should Know
“The Shepherdess” by Camille Pissarro
Camille Pissarro works painted between 1853 and 1866
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“It is absurd to look for perfection.”
– Camille Pissarro
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Photo Credit: 1) Camille Pissarro [Public domain]
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