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COURBET GUSTAVE

Cet article se compose de 4 pages.
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Courbet immediately understood that he had made a mistake and swerved back to his audacious style, notably with his great «Women Bathers». In 1854, he discovered the landscapes of southern France and softened his palette. He then painted a masterpiece titled «The Encounter», representing him coming forward in the direction of a friend, the collector Bruyas accompanied by a servant.

Courbet started to win new admirers and decided to express his pictorial doctrines in a symbolic way by producing a monumental painting titled «The Studio» in which he represented his best friends surrounding a nude model.


Gustave Courbet
"The ladies of the village
giving alms"

Courbet attached much importance to this work but was disgusted when the Jury of the 1855 Salon rejected it. Determined to show it to the public he decided to hold a private exhibition, which eventually was a failure. The artist understood then that his large paintings had no power of seduction over the French public and limited himself to producing average size works. He continued to paint until the Franco-Prussian war of 1870 after brief stays in Germany and in Belgium and nurtured a passion for the representation of animals, notably bucks.

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