The Hay Wain, oil painting created in 1821 by English landscape artist John Constable. It is not only the best known work by Constable, it is also one of the most popular English paintings.
The son of a prosperous miller, Constable was born in rural Suffolk, England, an area of idyllic scenery to which he referred throughout most of his artistic career. Even after his move to London in 1799 to begin his formal training at the Royal Academy, he still returned to the landscape of his youth on sketching trips. The artist used sketches to document the transitory effects of light and natural phenomena as they occurred. It was not unusual for him to return to his sketches, sometimes years later, and create finished works that evoke all the immediacy of a passing moment.
The tangible presence of a warm summer’s afternoon is strikingly apparent in this, probably Constable’s most famous work. The imposing 6-foot (1.8-m) canvas was painted in 1821 in his London studio and based on a series of oil sketches made the summer before. Constable developed the unusual technique of producing a full-size oil sketch of his large works that enabled him to fully resolve the composition and which offer a fascinating insight into the artist’s working practices.
The Hay Wain, which was first exhibited in 1821 but failed to receive much recognition, depicts a still millstream near Flatford Mill in Suffolk. It was bought in 1824 by the French art dealer John Arrowsmith and exhibited at the Paris Salon, where it won a gold medal. It was greatly admired by Eugène Delacroix and Théodore Géricault, among others, and was to prove influential on the development of landscape painting, especially in France, and in particular on the Barbizon school.