Le Père Jacques (The Wood Gatherer)

Le Père Jacques (The Wood Gatherer), original title in French: Le Père Jacques (Oncle Jacques), is an oil on canvas painting by the French painter Jules Bastien-Lepage, created in 1881. Exhibited at the Salon of 1882, in Paris, the work is now held at the Milwaukee Art Museum.

Description
The painting is a genre scene which represents an old man carrying a heavy load of wood on his back, in a forest where a little girl precedes him, busy picking tiny flowers. The man was actually a friend of the painter's family and the child his granddaughter. This composition is constructed from several oppositions: the one of the horizontal branches of the bundle carried on his back by the old man and the vertical trunks of the forest trees; the one of the protagonists, the old man and the young child, with their postures varying between fatigue and joyful carelessness, and the dark colors of the old man's clothing blending into the decor, and the blue of the little girl's dress in a complementary shade with the orange present throughout the autumn undergrowth. The blue is already present in the sky glimpsed through the trees of the hillside. The palette is completed by the green leaves of the foreground, reinforcing a final opposition between life and death in the foliage, in the old age and the youth of the protagonists, like their gazes show, with the old man staring straight towards the viewer, and the child looking away, since she is busy picking flowers.

The painting seems to reflect the influence in the artist of both the impressionist painters and a more conventional academic approach to nature, which earned him critical acclaim.