The Return of the Herd

Pieter Brueghel the Elder

Contemporary-Art.org
Keywords: ReturnHerd

Work Overview

The Return of the Herd
Original Title: De Terugkeer van de kudde (najaar)
Artist Pieter Brueghel the Elder
Year 1565
Type Oil on wood
Dimensions 117 cm × 159 cm (46 in ×  62 1⁄2 in)
Series   Twelve Months
Genre   landscape, genre painting
Location Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna


The Return of the Herd is an oil on wood painting by Pieter Bruegel in 1565. The painting is one in a series of six works, five of which are still intact, that depict different times of the year. The painting is currently in the collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum, located in Vienna, Austria. The autumnal colors of the landscape connect this particular painting to October/November.


A series of paintings of the Months was commissioned by Niclaes Jonghelinck, a wealthy Antwerp merchant who at the time of his death owned sixteen paintings by Bruegel. Of the series only five remain: The Hunters in the Snow (January), The Gloomy Day (February), Haymaking (July) The Corn Harvest (August) and The Return of the Herd (November). There has been much discussion as to whether the series was made up of twelve panels, as was usual, or of six, each of which would have represented the activities of two months. There is, however, little reason to doubt that Bruegel used the traditional scheme of twelve paintings. All five that survive belong to a well-established northern tradition of the representation of the months, which goes back to the calendar illustrations in medieval manuscript illuminations.


The paintings of the series were completed by February 1566; they were intended as part of a large-scale decorative scheme for the interior of the merchant's palatial house in Antwerp. As was usual in Flemish interiors of the time, Bruegel's landscape series was probably hung high up on the walls above the paneling, forming a continuous frieze around the room.


Bruegel occupies an important position in the history of landscape painting on account of his ability to convey to the observer the transformation of nature in the course of the seasons. This was no new subject. The religious texts in the illustrated prayer-books of the nobles in the late Middle Ages were often preceded by a calendar with a page for each month. These pages showed the course of the year, mainly by depicting the respective occupations carried out in the month in question. In Bruegel's art, it is always Nature itself which renders the season apparent: like the trees and animals, the people represent merely one part of the broad landscapes spread out before the observer.