Fernand Léger 'Partie de campagne' Exhibition Poster
Partie de campagne - ‘A Day in the Country’ - is one of the most joyful images in Léger’s late career: a mother and two children gathered in a sun-drenched outdoor setting, their forms rendered in his signature heavy black contours against blocks of primary colour. Painted in 1952, it belongs to the series Léger developed in the final years of his life around the theme of popular leisure - a subject he approached not as pastoral escapism but as a political declaration. The flat, bold graphic language, the bold outlines, the direct readable figures - all of it served his long-held conviction that art should be comprehensible to everyone, not merely to the cultivated few. The leisure series grew from Léger’s deep engagement with the social transformations of postwar France. He had spent the war years in New York, teaching at Mills College and maintaining close connections with the French émigré community. When he returned to Paris in 1945 and joined the Communist Party, he renewed his commitment to what he called ‘an art that is direct, understandable by all.’ Partie de campagne and its related works - including the monumental La Grande Parade - were the culmination of this thinking: images of workers at rest, of collective enjoyment, of the simple freedoms that the 1936 Front Populaire’s paid holiday legislation had made available to the French working class for the first time. Léger died in August 1955, and these late canvases stand as his summation. Poster design Copyright © 2026 Art Poster Archive. All Rights Reserved.
Specifications
- Size
- A3 (11.7 x 16.5 ins), A2 (16.5 x 23.4 ins), 18 x 24 ins (45 x 61 cm), A1 (23.4 x 33.1 ins), 24 x 36 ins (61 x 91 cm)
Variants (5)
- A3 (11.7 x 16.5 ins) — 34.26 USD — In stock
- A2 (16.5 x 23.4 ins) — 50.72 USD — In stock
- 18 x 24 ins (45 x 61 cm) — 50.72 USD — In stock
- A1 (23.4 x 33.1 ins) — 75.39 USD — In stock
- 24 x 36 ins (61 x 91 cm) — 75.39 USD — In stock
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