Troyon, Constant

Troyon, Constant

(kôNstäN` trwäyôN`), 1810–65, French painter of the Barbizon schoolBarbizon school
, an informal school of French landscape painting that flourished c.1830–1870. Its name derives from the village of Barbizon, a favorite residence of the painters associated with the school.
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, famous for his pictures of animals, particularly cows, in landscape. Among his paintings are Oxen at Work (Louvre) and Holland Cattle and Road in the Woods (Metropolitan Mus.).

Troyon, Constant

 

Born Aug. 28, 1810, in Sèvres; died Mar. 20,1865, in Paris. French painter of the Barbizon school.

Troyon started his career as a porcelain painter. He later became acquainted with T. Rousseau and J. Dupré and, on a trip in 1847 to Belgium and Holland, saw the works of P. Potter and A. Cuyp. As a result, he turned to the realistic depiction of the French countryside. Working near Fontainebleau and, beginning in 1852, in Normandy, Troyon painted landscapes profoundly democratic in subject matter and bathed in light and air; usually large figures of animals are depicted in the foreground. Notable examples include Departure for Market (1859; the Hermitage, Leningrad), The Return of the Flock (the Hermitage), and Return to the Farm (The Louvre, Paris).

REFERENCES

Iavorskaia, N. V. Peizazh barbizonskoi shkoly. Moscow, 1962.
Hustin, A. Constant Troyon. Paris, 1893.