Skip to main content
Les champs au mois de juin (Fields in the Month of June)
Les champs au mois de juin (Fields in the Month of June)

Les champs au mois de juin (Fields in the Month of June)

Artist (French, 1817–1878)
Date1874
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsImage: 54 x 86 inches (137.2 x 218.4 cm);
Frame: 61 3/4 × 96 3/4 inches (56.8 × 245.7 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineGift of Louis V. Keeler, Class of 1911, and Eva P. Keeler
Terms
  • Paintings
  • Landscape
  • Agricultural landscapes
  • Animals
  • Birds
  • Donkeys
  • Farm workers
  • Farming
  • Fields
  • Flowers
  • Haystacks
  • Landscapes
  • Moon
  • Poppies
  • Seasons
  • Summer
  • Trees
  • French
Object number59.087
Label CopyWhen "Fields in the Month of June" was shown in the Salon of 1874, Daubigny's rapid juxtaposition of brushstrokes, absence of detail, spots of brilliant color, and immediacy represented a dramatic move away from the classical polish of official Salon painting. Courbet's skilled use of the palette knife and Jules Breton's treatment of rural subject matter contributed to Daubigny's style as much as the decision to work in natural sunlight for a more direct translation of his settings. His innovative treatment of landscape would, in retrospect, be viewed by historians as a transitional moment between the style of the Salon (on whose jury he served) and the radical experiments of Pissarro, Cézanne, Renoir, and Monet; Monet's painting of poppy fields was shown only a year earlier and its rejection by the same Salon on whose jury Daubigny served had provoked the latter's resignation. In 1872, Daubigny traveled to the Netherlands, where he began his most important painting to date, "The Mills of Dordrecht." From his studio-barge, le botin, anchored at Auvers-sur-Oise, Daubigny continued to rely on Corot's organizing tonality (which had been his greatest influence as early as 1852), introducing in the Johnson Museum's monumental canvas vibrant accents and soaring expanses of sky that dwarfed the peasants laboring in the horizontal sweep of open field. One of his largest canvases, "Fields in the Month of June" overwhelmed unaccustomed eyes by its sheer scale and perspective. Not long before his death, van Gogh painted several versions of Daubigny's garden at Auvers; he had admired, fifteen years earlier, the Barbizon artist's "beautiful things" hanging in Goupil's London gallery. (From “A Handbook of the Collection: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art," 1998)
Collections
Lever de Lune sur les Bords de l'Oise
Charles François Daubigny
1875
Les Chevaux de Halage
Charles François Daubigny
1850
Les Bords du Cousin
Charles François Daubigny
1850
Le Bac de Bezons
Charles François Daubigny
1850
Le Grand Parc à Moutons
Charles François Daubigny
1860
Le Grand Parc à Moutons
Charles François Daubigny
1862
Le Printemps (Spring)
Charles François Daubigny
1857
Le Grand Parc á Moutons
Charles François Daubigny
1860
La Noce de Village
Charles François Daubigny
1840
Pommiers a l'Auvers
Charles François Daubigny
1877
L'Ondée (A Shower)
Charles François Daubigny
1850