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The Harvesters is an oil painting on wood completed by Pieter Bruegel the Elder in 1565. It depicts the harvest time set in a landscape, in the months of July and August or late summer. [ 1 ] Nicolaes Jonghelinck , a merchant banker and art collector from Antwerp, commissioned this painting as part of a cycle of six paintings depicting various ...
Harvesters (Danish: Høstarbejdere) is a 1905 oil painting on canvas by the Danish artist Anna Ancher, a member of the artists' community known as the Skagen Painters which flourished in Skagen in the north of Jutland in Denmark in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The rurality of his native region was his main source of inspiration. Nicknamed the “painter of harvesters”, his works bears witness to the working and peasant social life of his time through scenes of rural or urban work. It was the painting The Harvesters' Pay (1882) that brought him notoriety and recognition from his peers.
Le Ballon (1886) - Reading Public Museum and Art Gallery, Reading, Pennsylvania; The Harvesters (1885) - The Appleton Museum of Art, Ocala, Florida; The Harvester (c.1880/1) - Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia; Home From the Pasture (n.d.) - Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, South Carolina [citation needed]
The Harvesters is an oil painting on wood completed by Pieter Bruegel the Elder in 1565. It was commissioned by Nicolaes Jonghelinck , a merchant banker and art collector from Antwerp. Depicting the harvest, in July, August or late summer, the painting is one in a series of six works representing different times of the year.
The Harvesters (painting) Harvesters (Ancher) The Hay Harvest; Hay Harvest at Éragny; Haymaking (Bastien-Lepage) Haymaking in the Auvergne; Haystack Near Giverny; Haystacks (Monet series) Haystacks: Autumn; The Haywain Triptych
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The painting is briefly shown in the 2017 horror film It Comes at Night. In the novel Headlong by Michael Frayn, Martin Clay speculates on the sequence and number of Bruegel's paintings, starting with a disquisition on The Hunters in the Snow, after finding what he believes to be a lost picture of the series in a country house.