Cattle Grazing in Touraine
About this artwork
Although Troyon was concerned predominantly with creating a natural scene, there is an almost religious tone to this landscape. Such scenes of a bountiful, rural homeland were greatly admired in France in the wake of the 1848 Revolution. One critic, writing in 1853, remarked that Troyon’s paintings of grazing cows reminded him ‘of those lush Normandy pastures where the animals sink knee deep in thick, fresh grass … [exuding] an abundance of life, a fresh flowing sap, that I cannot over-praise.’ Hugh Laird bought this picture from Arthur Tooth & Sons in 1899 for £4,300.
Published July 2022
-
artist:Constant TroyonFrench (1810 - 1865)
-
title:Cattle Grazing in Touraine
-
date created:1854 - 1857
-
materials:Oil on canvas
-
measurements:81.50 x 117.50 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Bequest of Hugh A Laird 1911
-
accession number:NG 1033
-
gallery:
-
glossary:
Constant Troyon
Constant Troyon
While training to become a ceramic painter in his native Sèvres, Troyon spent his spare time studying landscape painting. He particularly admired the seventeenth-century Dutch landscape painter Jacob van Ruisdael. In the early 1830s, Troyon formed friendships with artists Théodore Rousseau and...