The Road to la Rochepot , 1952-53
87 x 107 cm (h x w)
Oil

© Josef Herman estate

In his autobiography, "Related Twilights: Notes from an Artist’s Diary", Herman relates how he came upon la Rochepot by chance while travelling through Burgundy in east-central France: 'There were hills, all pink and red, tall with golden leaves in autumnal splendour ', he recalled. 'Along the road came a procession of ultramarine carts each pulled by a giant of a horse and followed by a peasant couple, the man dressed in faded blue – almost lilac – and the woman covered from head to foot in black. […] It was a fortnight of bright autumn days, and nights lit by a red moon. Just to walk in this magnificence was sheer enchantment, and afterwards to draw the things I saw was an added joy'.

The Road to La Rochepot contains the classic elements of a Herman composition: a twilight setting and palette blending urban and rural elements with stoic peasant figures at its heart. For Herman the peasant was: a type, ‘but also an individual’, through whose bodies could be expressed a ‘kind of transcendental declaration of human independence’. In the 1950s Herman was championed by the Marxist critic John Berger as a painter of ‘ordinary lives’, whose work was socially relevant and accessible to all, seen and understood by those outside of the art establishment and art institutions, particularly the working class.

Exhibited by:

Ben Uri Research Unit

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