Developments in the 19th Century

 



Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map



 




The Birth of Realism


 




Gustave Courbet



 


 
Gustave Courbet

(b Ornans, Franche-Comté, 10 June 1819; d La Tour-de-Peilz, nr Vevey, Switzerland, 31 Dec 1877).

French painter and writer. Courbet’s glory is based essentially on his works of the late 1840s and early 1850s depicting peasants and labourers, which were motivated by strong political views and formed a paradigm of Realism. From the mid-1850s into the 1860s he applied the same style and spirit to less overtly political subjects, concentrating on landscapes and hunting and still-life subjects. Social commitment, including a violent anticlericalism, re-emerged in various works of the 1860s and continued until his brief imprisonment after the Commune of 1871. From 1873 he lived in exile in Switzerland where he employed mediocre artists, but also realized a couple of outstanding pictures with an extremely fresh and free handling. The image Courbet presented of himself in his paintings and writings has persisted, making him an artist who is assessed as much by his personality as by his work. This feature and also his hostility to the academic system, state patronage and the notion of aesthetic ideals have made him highly influential in the development of modernism.


 




 

Die Badende



 


Juliette Coubert



 


The Trellis



 

Femme Nue Endormie



 

The Woman in a Podoscaphe



 

The Hammock



 

Forest in Autumn



 

Dressing the Dead Girl



 

Basket of Flowers



 

Portrait of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon



 

Portrait of P.J. Proudhon in 1853



 

Portrait of Baudelaire



 

Paul Verlaine




 

The Houses of the Chateau d'Ornans