Jules Bastien-Lepage
Woman with a Rake (1877)
1877
Scroll
Jules Bastien-Lepage
Woman with a Rake (1877)
1877
Physical Qualities
Etching, Sheet: 286 x 213 mm. (11 1/4 x 8 3/8 in.)
Plate: 275 x 198 mm. (10 13/16 x 7 13/16 in.)
Credit Line
The George A. Lucas Collection, purchased with funds from the State of Maryland, Laurence and Stella Bendann Fund, and contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations throughout the Baltimore community
Object Number
1996.48.1916
In Jean-François Millet’s drawing, a haystack towers over
a woman field worker gazing down at more hay before
her. Meanwhile, François-Nicolas Auguste Feyen-Perrin
depicted a woman sifting through valuable grain as wheat
husks (or chaff) cascade from her basket. Seen from behind,
the woman in Jules Bastien-Lepage’s print returns home
after a day of labor.
Standing amidst signs of plenty—hay piled high, endless
fields, streaming chaff—these women seem exhausted,
with downward gazes and hands on hips. This contrast
foregrounds the physical labor that agriculture demands. In
19th-century France, women contributed significantly to the
economic stability of rural households, even while they were
denied equal legal rights.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 1996; The Maryland Institute College of Art, through Henry Walters, Baltimore, by bequest 1909; from George A. Lucas, Paris
Deconstructing Nature: Environmental Transformation in the Lucas Collection
Inscribed: Signed in plate: lower left "BASTIEN-LEPAGE"
Markings: None