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Gustave Courbet Term Paper

¶ … painting "The Artist's Studio" by the famous 19th century French painter Gustave Courbet. The artist's legacy and influence in the world of painting has also been explored. Gustave Courbet:

The Artist's Studio

The Artist's Studio is a huge, monumental painting (11? 10? x 19? 9?) completed by Gustave Courbet in six weeks in 1854-55.

The artist sub-titled the painting as "A True Allegory Concerning Seven Years of My Artistic Life." The painting contains over twenty life-size figures in the artist's studio with Courbet himself occupying center-stage. He is shown painting a landscape attended by a dog, a small boy and a nude female figure looking over the artist's shoulder at the painting. "The world comes to be painted at my studio,"

the artist had remarked at the time. This is perhaps depicted in the seemingly lively, spirited group of people on the right side of the painting. The group supposedly consists of his friends some of whom have been identified as Baudelaire, Champfleury and Proudhon.

The left side of...

The identity of these people is not certain but appear to be beggars and working class people. Different interpretations have been given to the painting over the years, but most critics agree that it is an allegory of all the influences on Courbet's artistic life, which are portrayed as human figures from all levels of society.
Even the portrayal of Courbet himself shown in the painting with back to a nude model has been called "a symbolic representation of academic tradition."

Other critics have termed the painting to be a critique of the French economic system of the time, as it seems to criticize the widening gap between the rich and the poor classes -- the poor depicted by the beggars and working class people on the left side of the painting contrasted by the rich on the right.

The Artist's Legacy

Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) was born and grew up at a time when painting was highly stylized and elitist, steeped in the "Neoclassical" and "Romantic" schools…

Sources used in this document:
Bibliography

Cullen, Allison. (2000). From The Trivial to The True: The French Revolution and Painting

Retrieved on February 27, 2002 from http://www.kirschnet.com/bome/cities/paris/hband/painting_essay.html

"Gustave Courbet": French Painter, Draftsman. (2000). From the Getty Museum Web Site. Retrieved on February 27, 2002 from http://www.getty.edu/art/collections/bio/a369-1.html

"Gustave Courbet." The Artist's Studio.(1998). Eds. Musee d'Orsay and Decan. Retrieved on February 27, 2002 from http://www.musee-orsay.fr:8081/ORSAY/orsaygb/COLLEC.NSF/e285dbff73cc5aed802563cd00524868/34be5cc76cfc8577802563ce00365ccd?OpenDocument
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