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Jean-François Millet home in Gréville-Hague dans la Manche

Musée
Label Maison des illustres
Musée des Artistes peintres célèbres

Jean-François Millet home in Gréville-Hague

    Hameau Gruchy
    50440 Gréville-Hague

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
4 octobre 1814
Birth of Jean-François Millet
1837
Departure for Paris
20 janvier 1875
Death of Millet
1944
Destruction of the house
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean-François Millet - Realistic painter Born and inspired in this house
M. Mouchel (dit Dumouchel) - First Master of Millet Forma Millet in Cherbourg
M. Langlois de Chevreville - Second Master of Millet Continuing his artistic training
Paul Delaroche - Historical painter Teacher at the School of Fine Arts
Pauline-Virginie Ono - First wife of Millet Married 1841 in Cherbourg
Catherine Lemaire - Second wife of Millet Nine children with Millet

Origin and history

Jean-François Millet's home stands in the hamlet of Gruchy, in the commune of Gréville-Hague, in the heart of the Hague peninsula in Normandy. This modest place, now restored after its destruction in 1944, plunges the visitor into the rural and family world that marked the first years of the painter. The atmosphere was imbued with moral rigorism and piety, values dear to his peasant family, while allowing his early talent for drawing to flourish, encouraged by his father.

Millet's childhood was divided between agricultural work and his first artistic lessons. His father took him to Cherbourg to meet Mr. Mouchel (known as Dumouchel), his first master, with whom he studied two years while returning regularly to the family farm. After the death of his father, he was formed by Mr. Langlois de Chevreville, and then obtained a scholarship from the Cherbourg Town Hall and the General Council of the Channel. This allowed him, at 23, to join Paris and the École des Beaux-Arts, where he briefly followed the courses of Paul Delaroche before turning to the study of realistic masters at the Louvre.

The house, now integrated into the departmental network of the sites of the Channel, offers an authentic overview of the peasant life of the nineteenth century. There are objects from the daily life (milk kennes, sinot, greasy) that inspired Millet, as well as a collection of his preparatory sketches. Nearby, the hamlet of Gruchy preserves the landscapes and buildings (such as The house at the well or Le Rocher du Castel Vendon) that he immortalized in his works. An exhibition hall also welcomes contemporary artists inspired by his heritage.

Millet, though moved to Barbizon where he became a major figure in the Barbizon School, often returned to his native Hague to draw inspiration. His drawings of landscapes and peasants, made on site, transcend realism without strict ethnological concern. The house and its environment, preserved from motorized traffic, allow visitors to grasp the vista of the artist, between intimate memory and rural heritage.

The site also features a film retracing his life and work, highlighting his attachment to his roots: "a peasant son who paints peasants". The restoration of the house, destroyed during the Second World War, symbolizes the desire to perpetuate the heritage of an artist who raised the peasant condition to the rank of noble subject, between Christian faith and careful observation of the work of the earth.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Contact organisation : 02 33 01 81 91