In the Forest of Fontainbleau

Description

The forest at Fontainebleau was a favorite subject of Barbizon artists, who were by its beauty and its proximity to Paris. Rousseau, a premier Barbizon painter, was attacked by critics in the 1830s and 1840s for his humble farm and forest scenes, which they considered to be "vulgar." The two figures in this landscape may be Rousseau himself and the adopted daughter of George Sand; the two were engaged in 1845.

Provenance

Sold by B. C. Holland, Chicago, to the Art Institute, 1967.

In the Forest of Fontainbleau

Théodore Rousseau

c. 1850

Accession Number

27873

Medium

Charcoal, with stumping and black pastel, heightened with touches of white chalk, on dark tan wove paper, laid down on tan wood pulp board

Dimensions

28.5 × 42.4 cm (11 1/4 × 16 3/4 in.)

Classification

chalk

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Harold Joachim Purchase Fund