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COURBET GUSTAVE

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He also expressed a liking for seascapes, showing views of the Mediterranean sea or the Channel and exhaling a rare talent when it came to paint furious waves. In addition he painted many nudes, including his stunningly erotic piece titled «Origin of the World» showing the womb of a woman with an incredible close-up on her pubis, a work which remained hidden behind a conventional scene during many years before it was acquired a decade ago by the Orsay Museum.

At the end of the 1860s Courbet was no longer considered as a mad anarchist who had spent sometime in jail as a result of a revolutionary ideas whereas art critics started to admit that he had good technical skills though they still did not like his works. In 1867 he felt he was ready to show his works at the Universal Exhibition in Paris and decided to hang some 100 paintings in a large exhibition hall especially built for this occasion. However the public ignored him again and such failure made him hate the Imperial regime and the Bourgeois society more than ever.

A staunch Socialist, Courbet often naturally represented social themes in his works such as «The Stone-Breakers» and demonstrated his hatred of Catholicism in «The Return from the Conference» painted in 1863, a work which caused much scandal.

In 1869 Courbet refused the Legion of Honour distinction that the Imperial government wanted to award him. Unsurprisingly, he played a political role after the fall of Napoleon 3rd and was appointed President of the Artists' Federation. As such he strove to preserve France's national treasures during the siege of Paris and the «Commune» uprising but committed a serious blunder in writing a letter to the provisional government in which he asked for the dismantling of the Vendôme column, symbol of the French Empire. The Vendôme column was destroyed a few months later and when troops fighting rebels conquered Paris he was arrested with other leaders of the «Commune» movement.

His enemies tried to designate Courbet as the main culprit regarding the destruction of the Vendôme Column and his life became a nightmare from then on. He resumed work after a six-month prison term but at the instigation of Meissonier his works were refused by the jury of the Paris Salon.

In 1873 a court sentenced him to pay for the rebuilding costs of the Vendôme column and his belongings were seized. To avoid arrest he sought refuge in Switzerland where he tried to pursue his career but worn out by his ordeal he did not manage to produce major works and accepted too often the help of some pupils going as far as authenticating paintings which were unworthy of his talent. His death, which occurred on December 31st 1877, was unnoticed in France.

Courbet, a much proud and ill-tempered artist though quite generous, also produced sculptures and lithographs during his prolific career. He once said he had surpassed Delacroix in showing contemporary events in live scenes but did not manage to have a marked influence over other artists and kept his doctrines for himself. Still, through his deliberate rebellion against the establishment he paved the way for the Impressionist school though his political stand induced the Bourgeois public to become weary of artistic revolutions, an attitude which prompted Impressionist painters to soften their palette at the end of the 19th Century.

Courbet's influence, especially as the creator of an expressive, powerful and striking form of art aimed at exhaling daily life, became much more stronger from 1890, especially in Germany.

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