Gustave Courbet (1819-77)
Courbet was
the main exponent of Realism in 19th-century French painting. His work
contrasts with the Classicism of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres and the
Romanticism of Eugène Delacroix. He relied on the use of the palette knife to
create heavily impastoed surfaces, as if to stress his disdain for the fine
finish of academic practice. Courbet was born at Ornans in eastern France and
received his early training in Besançon. In Paris from 1840, he studied
especially the Dutch and Venetian paintings in the Louvre. He exhibited at the
Salon in 1844, but public and official favour later deserted him. His mature
works often treat genre subjects on the grand scale of history painting, as in
his ambitious painting of his studio. After this was turned down by the
Exposition Universelle in 1855, he held a one-man exhibition establishing his
position as a Realist. (National Gallery Website)
Gustave
Courbet, Burial at Ornans, 1851 Oil on canvas, 3.15 m x 6.6 m
Musée d’Orsay, Paris
Analysis of the painting
Content
A Burial at
Ornans is a huge, frieze-like portrayal of sombre middle-class citizens at a
graveside in Courbet's home town. It generated an explosive reaction among the
painter's audience and critics. With few exceptions, viewers react to the work
as an assault on the very idea of what a painting should be. With the recent worker
uprisings of 1848 , Courbet's use of the “common” people as a grand subject was
deemed a radical act -- "the engine of revolution," as one critic
said.
Form and
process
In his push
towards a realistic style, Courbet has intentionally painted his black-clad
folk in a manner that does not idealise their suffering. They are real people. The
Salon audience is accustomed to paintings that uplift, and they read Courbet's
grieving figures as vulgar and ugly. One critic writes, "He paints
pictures as you black your boots."
Energy
Courbet
wrote that his aims were to "translate the customs, the ideas, the
appearance of my epoch according to my own appreciation; in a word, to create
living art, that is my goal." Many art historians view Courbet's
determination toward artistic freedom as an important rupture with the
Salon-controlled painting of the past (grand historical mythological, religious
paintings), and an inspiration to the next generation of innovators, the
Impressionists. His work does not have the high finish of the usual type of
salon paintings of the time, and reflects the subject matter of his genre
scenes.
Culture
Courbet was
a rebel and bohemian. He was the first painter to sponsor his own,
self-financed exhibitions. His support for the poor and oppressed ran contrary
to French politics. Near the end of his life, in the 1870s, he was jailed
briefly for his association with the Paris Commune.
Relevance to my work.
Realism forms the basis for many movements and styles which are relevant to my approach. It is at the heart of Industrial and Social Realism, for instance, L.S.Lowry, whose work I shall be looking at in future research and posts.