{"product_id":"bonfils-haystacks-landscape-oil-panel-framed-19thc","title":"Gaston Bonfils Signed Oil Painting, Haystacks in a French Harvest Landscape, 19th Century on Wood Panel, Carved Frame","description":"\u003ch2\u003eHaystacks at the Edge of the Field\u003c\/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWhat you notice first is the warmth. The whole panel glows with the dry golden light of late summer, the kind of heat that sits in the stubble and radiates back off the stacked sheaves. Bonfils set his haystacks in a loose diagonal across the middle of the composition, five or six of them in varying stages of construction, their conical forms casting short blue-violet shadows on the ground. The brushwork here is direct and physical: thick ridges of ochre and raw sienna laid down with a loaded palette knife or a stiff brush, building up the texture of the straw so convincingly that the surface of the panel becomes almost sculptural in places. Beyond the haystacks, a line of trees marks the far edge of the field, their foliage a dense band of olive and blue-green against the pale sky. A few rooftops peek through the branches on the right, just enough to place the scene in the settled agricultural landscape of central or northern France. The sky itself is handled with a lighter touch, thin washes of blue and cream that let the grain of the panel show through in the upper corners, a nice contrast to the heavily worked foreground.\u003c\/p\u003e\n \n\u003cp\u003eBonfils signed the work in the lower right, his \"G. Bonfils\" in dark paint against the stubble. The signature is confident and practiced, the sort of mark a painter puts down without thinking twice, which tells you something about how many of these panels he produced. The frame is a period piece in its own right: a heavy carved profile with a dark outer band and a gilt inner moulding, the kind of presentation that French landscape painters of the second half of the nineteenth century favored for their smaller plein air studies. There are some gaps at the frame joints, consistent with age and the natural movement of wood over a hundred-plus years, but the overall effect remains handsome. The panel itself is stable, the paint surface intact with no visible cracking, and the palette retains its original warmth without the yellow cast that old varnish can sometimes impose. It reads as a painting that was well stored and has come through its first century in remarkably good shape.\u003c\/p\u003e\n \n\u003ch2\u003eAbout the Artist\u003c\/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eGaston Bonfils was a French landscape painter active in the second half of the nineteenth century. He worked in the tradition that flowed from the Barbizon school through early Impressionism, painting directly from nature with an emphasis on light, atmosphere, and the textures of the rural French countryside. His subjects were drawn from the agricultural landscape: harvest scenes, hayfields, village edges, and the open country around Paris and the provinces. Bonfils favored wood panel as a support, a choice common among plein air painters of his generation who valued the smooth, firm surface for its responsiveness to the loaded brush. His work appears regularly in French auction houses and private collections, and he is recognized among the broader group of late-nineteenth-century French landscapists who carried the plein air tradition forward from Corot and Daubigny into the era of the Impressionists.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"GalerieClub Fine Art","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57228433588556,"sku":"130","price":2400.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1048\/4911\/3420\/files\/Gaston_Bonfils_signed_oil_painting_on_wood_panel_haystacks_in_French_harvest_landscape_carved_frame_19th_century.png?v=1778938080","url":"https:\/\/galerieclub.com\/products\/bonfils-haystacks-landscape-oil-panel-framed-19thc","provider":"GalerieClub Fine Art","version":"1.0","type":"link"}