Birth of Jean-François Millet 1814 (≈ 1814)
Born in Gruchy, in the Hague.
1886
Launch of subscription
Launch of subscription 1886 (≈ 1886)
Draft statue initiated by public subscription.
4e quart XIXe siècle
Construction of the monument
Construction of the monument 4e quart XIXe siècle (≈ 1987)
Period of construction of the statue.
2006
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 2006 (≈ 2006)
Registration of the monument and its base.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The statue with its base (cad. non-cadastre, public domain): registration by order of 18 August 2006
Key figures
Jean-François Millet - Realistic painter
Subject of the statue, born in Gruchy.
Henri Chapu - Initial sculptor
Author of the original project, died before completion.
Jean-Ernest Bouteiller - Final sculptor
Completed the bust and added allegory.
Origin and history
The statue of Jean-François Millet, installed in the public garden of Octeville (now Cherbourg-en-Cotentin), pays tribute to this realistic painter born in 1814 in the Hague. Originally from Gréville, Millet marked 19th-century art with his peasant scenes, such as Les Glauses or L-Angelus, becoming a major figure in Barbizon's school. His work, rooted in Norman rural life, influenced movements such as Impressionism.
The monument, erected in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, is the result of a public subscription launched in 1886. Originally designed by Henri Chapu, then completed by Jean-Ernest Bouteiller after Chapu's death, he combines a marble bust of the painter with a bronze allegory: a peasant and her child offering flowers, symbol of the themes dear to Millet. The granite pedestal evokes the landscapes of Gréville, its native village.
Ranked among the Historical Monuments in 2006, the statue embodies Cherbourg-en-Cotentin's attachment to its cultural heritage. Millet, trained in Cherbourg before settling in Paris and then Barbizon, drew inspiration for paintings such as Le Hameau Cousin or Le Puits de Gruchy. His social realism, mixing dignity and poetry, transcended borders, inspiring artists like Van Gogh or Dalí.
Millet's home in Gruchy, rebuilt in the same way, and the Thomas Henry Museum in Cherbourg today preserve its works, perpetuating its memory. The monument of the public garden is thus part of a heritage network celebrating this son of Normandy, whose art has raised the peasant condition to the rank of noble subject.
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