An Early Summer Morning in the Forest of Fontainebleau
Théodore Rousseau, probably 1861
About this artwork
Step into the tranquil world of Théodore Rousseau's *An Early Summer Morning in the Forest of Fontainebleau (probably 1861), a gem of the Barbizon School Rousseau, a pioneering French landscape painter, championed realism over romantic idealization, drawing inspiration from the ancient oaks and sun-dappled glades of Fontainebleau Forest south of Paris. This area was a haven for artists seeking nature's unvarnished beauty, influencing the shift toward plein-air painting that paved the way for Impressionism. Painted in oil on wood—a compact panel format ideal for Rousseau's meticulous studies of light and texture—the work captures the soft glow of dawn filtering through dense foliage. At 15 x 23⅝ inches, its intimate scale invites close contemplation of the forest's understory, where every leaf and shadow reveals the artist's profound observation of seasonal transience. Rousseau's textured brushwork evokes the humidity of an early summer morn, blending poetic lyricism with scientific precision. Now housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department through the 1913 bequest of Benjamin Altman, this piece exemplifies 19th-century Romanticism's embrace of the sublime in everyday nature, reminding us of the forest's enduring allure.