Advanced Search

The Shepherd’s Star

The Shepherd’s Star

Artist: Jules Breton (French, 1827-1906)
Date: 1887
Dimensions:
Painting: 40 1/2 × 31 in. (102.9 × 78.7 cm)
Frame: 53 1/4 × 44 3/4 × 5 1/2 in. (135.3 × 113.7 × 14 cm)
Medium: oil on canvas
Place of Origin: France
Classification: Photographs
Credit Line: Gift of Arthur J. Secor
Object number: 1922.41
Label Text:Barefoot and carrying a heavy sack of potatoes on her head, a young peasant woman returns from the fields at twilight as Capella, the “shepherd’s star,” rises over her shoulder. The model was an agricultural worker from Courrières, artist Jules Breton’s native village in the Artois region of northern France. However, the painter gives the figure a classical monumentality and timelessness that removes her from any commentary on her social position. As one critic wrote of The Shepherd’s Star in 1888, “imagine that she carried on her back a sheaf of wheat instead of a sack of potatoes, and then she could be the personification of harvesting. She would be a modern Ceres [goddess of summer].”

Unlike the more frank, unsentimental images of workers by French Realist artists like Jean-François Millet (see his The Quarriers), Breton’s paintings present a romanticized view of the French peasant as the heroic embodiment of a traditional, idyllic, and noble way of life. This agrarian lifestyle, however, was rapidly disappearing under the pressures of the Industrial Revolution, prompting a sense of nostalgia for what was being lost to modernization.


On view
In Collection(s)