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Get ready to meet Ireland's most charming farmers in the 2025 Irish Farmer Calendar! This beloved calendar is back with a fresh collection of fun and cheeky photos, showcasing farmers in playful ...
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Breton Peasant Women is an 1894 oil on canvas painting by Paul Gauguin of two Breton peasant women in conversation. [1] It is now in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris. [2]
Jean-François Millet, La Charité, 1859. The "peasant genre" of the Realism movement began in the 1840s with the works of Jean-François Millet, Jules Breton, and others.. Van Gogh described the works of Millet and Breton as having religious significance, "something on high," and described them as being the "voices of the wh
They fan out in groups, mostly women, plodding in rain boots across the soggy wet sands of the inlet, making the most of the low tide. Clam collecting in the expansive inlets of Spain’s ...
The Gleaners (Des glaneuses) is an oil painting by Jean-François Millet completed in 1857.It is held in the Musée d'Orsay, in Paris.. It depicts three peasant women gleaning a field of stray stalks of wheat after the harvest.
The Irish slip jig, first published as "The Irish Pot Stick" (c.1758), appears as "Shilling a Gig" in Brysson's A Curious Collection of Favourite Tunes (1791) and "Sheela na Gigg" in Hime's 48 Original Irish Dances (c.1795). [9] These are the oldest recorded references to the name, [6] but do not apply to the architectural figures.
The painting shows a peasant farm girl walking in a field transfixed, listening to birdsong at dawn. It was first exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1885. Since 1894, it has been part of the Henry Field Memorial Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago .