My work life and my home life couldn’t be more
different. I work in an office at a desk
sitting behind a computer for five days a week from 7:30 to 4:30. When I am home, I am seldom indoors, always
outside unless it is dark or storming.
During my lunch breaks at work while I’m enjoying some leftovers, I
search through the Internet for stories of interest that I might consume along
with last night’s delicious meal. Those
stories are largely about gardening, homesteading, agrarian blogs and
such.
Although I’m by no means an art critic, nor do I have
good taste in fine art, I do know what I like when I see it. On this particular day I think I Googled
“Agrarian Art” or “Old Agriculture Paintings” and came across some artwork by
an author named Jean-Francois Millet that I liked. I looked at a lot of his work and I like this
one the best:
Image Credit |
It is a very simple painting that depicts a couple in the
midst of solemn prayer. If you look
closely, you can see that the gentleman has a digging fork and the lady has a
basket. There are potatoes in the basket
as well as strewn around on the ground.
There is a wheel barrow loaded with what appears to be sacks of potatoes
that they have already dug.
It is either early in the morning or late in the
afternoon by the lighting and this tells you that this peasant couple is
hardworking. I think it is nice that they work side by side. I would imagine that they talk to one another and share their thoughts all day. Either they are laboring
early or they have put in a long day in harvesting the potato crop. If you look off in the distance, you can see
a tall church steeple. The steeple
prominently shown in the background coupled with the couple’s reverence lets you know
that faith was of foremost importance to this couple and this rural community.
I
wanted to learn more about the background of the painter and the painting so I
visited This Site and This Site. Jean-Francois Millet was from France and was born in 1814. If you look at his work, you will see that he
painted many depictions of peasant agricultural life. Many of his paintings feature simple farming folk bent over in work and
capture the strong work ethic of a people tied to the land and its produce for
their very survival.
I think it is important that the peasant couple humbled
themselves and recognized that their success and survival was dependent upon
the Almighty. They toiled in a hardscrabble existence and performed
manual labor that had been in effect since the Curse of the Ground in Genesis
3:17-18. They were fervently praying for
a bountiful harvest. You can bet that
they were doing the same when they planted the potatoes and worked the fields
up until the harvest. You can’t help but
hope that their prayers were answered.
Millet’s painting is a good reminder that we would do
well to answer ‘the bell’ and its call to prayer in our daily lives.
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