Courbet, Gustave
(1819-77). The painter Courbet started and dominated the
French movement toward
realism.
Art critics and the public were accustomed to
pretty pictures that made life look better than it was. Courbet, against much
opposition, truthfully portrayed ordinary places and people.
Gustave Courbet was born on June 10, 1819, to a prosperous farming family
in Ornans, France. He went to Paris in 1841, supposedly to study law, but he
soon decided to study painting and learned by copying the pictures of master
artists. In 1844 his self-portrait,
Courbet with a Black Dog,
was accepted by the Salon, an annual public exhibition of art
sponsored by the influential Royal Academy.
In 1848 a political revolution in France foreshadowed a revolution in art,
as people in the arts became more open to new ideas. Courbet's early work was
exhibited successfully in 1849. That same year he visited his family in the
countryside and produced one of his greatest paintings,
The Stone-Breakers,
followed by
Burial at Ornans in 1850. Both were quite unlike the romantic
pictures of the day because they showed peasants in realistic settings
instead of the rich in glamorized situations. In 1855 he completed a huge
canvas,
The Artist's Studio, and, when it was refused for an important
exhibition, Courbet boldly displayed his work himself near the exhibition
hall.