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Gustave Courbet
Gustave Courbet, the swaggering enfant terrible of 19th-century French painting, didn't just depict reality; he wrestled it onto the canvas. Born in 1819, Courbet rejected the saccharine historical fantasies favoured by the Academy, choosing instead to paint what he saw around him: peasants, landscapes, and the unvarnished truth of the human form. This commitment to Realism, a movement he effectively spearheaded, was as much a political act as an aesthetic one, a defiant shout against the established order. Courbet's most famous works, such as 'The Stone Breakers' (destroyed during WWII) and 'Burial at Ornans', were not merely paintings; they were manifestos. He elevated the everyday to the monumental, forcing viewers to confront the lives of ordinary people with the same seriousness previously reserved for gods and heroes. His nudes, like 'The Bathers', scandalised Parisian society, not for their nudity, but for their unapologetic lack of idealisation. They were real women, with real bodies, a stark contrast to the airbrushed fantasies of academic art. Though controversial in his time, Courbet's influence is undeniable. He paved the way for future generations of artists to break free from tradition and embrace the world around them. Owning a Courbet print is more than just acquiring a beautiful image; it's a declaration of independence, a celebration of the real, and a nod to the artist who dared to paint the world as it truly was.


































