The Fisherman (Le Pêcheur)

Cleveland Museum of Art

The Fisherman (Le Pêcheur)

Théodore Rousseau

Date
c. 1840–45
Medium
pen and brown ink and brush, gray and black wash (scratched away in places), with touches of pink watercolor
Culture
France, 19th century
Department
Drawings
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

The quintessential Barbizon artist, Rousseau was romantically in love with nature. He spent the better part of twenty years living in near poverty in a cottage in the village of Barbizon, painting in a converted barn. The Fisherman is an early drawing by the artist, probably executed on the outskirts of Paris. The tree, the foreground grasses and rocks, and the humble form of the fisherman at rest are rendered with great specificity. Rousseau thought of each tree in the Forest of Fontainebleau as being almost human, each marked by a particular fate and struggle.

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