Artwork Page for The Four Seasons: Autumn

Details / Information for The Four Seasons: Autumn

The Four Seasons: Autumn

1635
(French, 1602–1676)
Measurements
Sheet: 26.1 x 32 cm (10 1/4 x 12 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Le Blanc 355, Duplessis 1084, Blum 1035
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Like the figures in this composition, Bosse himself had little interest in following the rules. In 1661, he was expelled from the French Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture due to his controversial teachings.

Description

Depictions of the four seasons in the early modern period often emphasized timeless agrarian seasonal activities. In this image of autumn, however, Abraham Bosse portrayed instead a group of middle-class people in contemporary costume. The men and women appear not as laborers bringing in the crops, but as drinkers sampling the harvest. As urban dwellers invading a rural space, they make a mess of it, overturning the table, drawing the sword, and tussling in the shadows—all indicators of taking too much liberty with the “new wine” (du vin nouveau).
A horizontally oriented print in black ink depicts a chaotic outdoor scene under a grape trellis. On the left, two men brawl while a man in a feathered hat is restrained by two people in the center. To the right, a figure pulls a vine. A dog stands near a tilted table in the foreground. Fine cross-hatching shades the scene, enclosed in a vine border with French text along the bottom.

The Four Seasons: Autumn

1635

Abraham Bosse

(French, 1602–1676)
France, 17th century

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