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Courbet Reconsidered
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15092 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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4 / 1989 |
2,925 Words |
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Jason Edward Kaufman Jason Edward Kaufman is an art historian and critic based in
New York. |
In the democratization of French society that took place in the mid-nineteenth century, Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) led the assault on elitist aesthetics. As Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825) had displaced the sentimental and decadent pomp of the Rococo court with a robust, high-minded republican style, so Courbet, sixty years later, invaded the state-run art establishment, opposing its artificiality with his coarse brand of Realism.
Raised in Ornans, a village near Switzerland, Courbet came from a wealthy bourgeois family. After brief artistic training with former students of Baron Gros and David, the twenty-year-old arrived in Paris in 1839. Instead of enrolling at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, where he would have continued his Neo-Classical education, he copied Dutch, Flemish, Venetian, and Spanish pictures in the museums. The freely brushed, earthy realism of these schools set the tone for his own mature style.
Courbet's career falls mainly between the ephemeral revolutions of 1848 and 1871. In the intervening Second Empire, he was one of the most controversial figures in the Paris art world. Courbet was not merely an artist; he was a formidable political force for Republicanism, and his subject matter and the style of its depiction made an all-out assault on the conservative standards of the imperial regime and its state-run Academy.
The Academy controlled both the instruction and exhibition of art in France. It sanctioned only mythological, biblical, or French history painting and approved of highly finished, classicizing compositions. The Academy's Neo-Classicism linked the imperial government with the great monarchic civilizations of
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