LÉON AUGUSTIN LHERMITTE (1844-1925)
Leon Augustin Lhermitte was born in Mont-Saint-Pere in 1844 and died in Paris in 1925. This French painter and etcher was a highly regarded social realist painter whose work primarily focused upon the rural scenery and daily lives of the peasant worker. Lhermitte showed immense artistic talent at a young age, and his upbringing in Mont Saint-Pere in Picardie provided him with the subject matter and landscapes that would later become the foundation in his portfolio.
Lhermitte was a student of Lecocq de Boisbourdran at the Petite Ecole school in Paris and formed life-long friendships with Cezanne, Rodin, Legros and Fantin-Latour. After his first show at the Paris Salon in 1864 Lhermitte was beginning to be recognized with great acclaim. He was awarded the French Legion of Honour in 1884 and won the Grand Prize at the Exposition Universelle in 1889 and has etchings and paintings housed in museums throughout the United States and around the world.
Lhermitte gained a laudable reputation for his artistic mastery using oils, pastels and charcoal. With influences stemming from the work of Jean Francois Millet, Lhermitte adopted the method of peinture clair, a style similar to impressionism but able to be used in a more commercially successful way. He was the leading member of the school of Social Realism and almost always painted scenes taken from rural life.
Up until his death in 1925, Leon Augustin Lhermitte continued to create works in the French rural tradition, leaving behind his social realist paintings and works on paper as a reminder of the simple lives revolving around the rural French countryside.
In 1923 Lhermitte went to Avignon to rest and enjoy the mild climate of the south. This pastel is among the picturesque scenes that he brought back from his sojourn.