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Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) (Pocket library of great art)

Author: Gustave Courbet
Publisher: Abrams
Category: Book

Buy Used: $7.00



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 2205293


ASIN: B0007DPPM8

Publication Date: 1956
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: VERY GOOD but for staining/soiling to front cover and light edge tanning to pages. Includes 12 color plates, 6 of which fold out to double size of 5.5 by 8 inches. many b/w plates. 1956 Abrams, text by Andre Chamson

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Gustave Courbet
  • Unknown Binding - Gustave Courbet (Collection "The new artists")
  • Paperback - Gustave Courbet
  • Hardcover - Gustave Courbet
  • Unknown Binding - Gustave Courbet (The Masters)

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  • Poussin and Nature: Arcadian Visions (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
  • Cranach
  • Georges Seurat: The Drawings
  • Jasper Johns: Gray (Art Institute of Chicago)
  • J.M.W. Turner

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars great book, poor quality   June 12, 2008
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

The essays of the book are so informative and useful for any scholar. I really enjoy reading this book but due to the poor and fancy typography, it makes me feel hard even reading a short paragraph. There are more than 450 color images in this book but unfortunately most of them; especially Courbet's paintings are out off focus. There are many full-page color images, one could hardly find the details of the artwork because they are blurred and dull. I would like to give 6 stars to the great texts but 2 stars for the poor quality of the printing. This book could be actually one of the best monographs on individual artist, But I think, the Met Museum owed too much to Courbet and all the contributors.


5 out of 5 stars Touche' Courbet   June 5, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book is a companion piece to the recent Courbet exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum. It is lavishly illustrated and most of the exhibited works are within. The text is informative and well written. The book will make a stunning addition to your coffee table.


5 out of 5 stars major new study of the art, life, and ideas of the French painter Courbet   April 1, 2008
 7 out of 13 found this review helpful

Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) embraced the democratic ideas and values taking root in French Society following the overthrow of the French monarchy in the latter 1700s not only in his art, but in all other areas of his life as well. A moody bohemian-like person who naturally drifted to the margins of society, Courbet nonetheless sought political positions. At one time, he was the mayor of Paris's Sixth Arrondissement.

Courbet is often simplistically labeled a painter of Realism. But he disapproved of this label; and attention to the style, compositions, and innovations of his paintings disputes this as well. While Courbet's art patently and by intention marks a break with the formal, academicized, and rhetorical paintings popular with France's Ancien Regime, his turn to realism was not an attempt to depict nature with verisimilitude. The individuals of his paintings imply the broader, ideological reach of his paintings. As his contemporary the critic Castagnary put it, Courbet aimed to paint a democratic public "with all the seriousness, strength, and character normally reserved for gods, heroes, and kings." While Courbet replaced the later traditional subjects with the former contemporary ones, the dignified, to varying degrees romanticized presentation of such subjects carried over in Courbet's paintings. Courbet for instance never engaged in the caricature of Hogarth in England or even Daumier in his own country of newly-empowered democratic types crudely, vulgarly coming onto the social scene.

Furthermore, Courbet "is less concerned with presenting the truth [of nature as seen or experienced]...than with presenting solidity...[h]e seeks to express the materiality of the world around him." Like Caravaggio or Rembrandt, Courbet often uses shadowing--i. e., shades of darkness--to bring out various literal and evocative dimensions of his subjects; though this does not go nearly so far as Rembrandt in sometimes almost effacing the physicality of the subject. With Courbet, the physical is never lost. Although Courbet is not strictly a naturalist painter, the individuals and features of the natural world in his paintings ordinarily do have a naturalness of pose and ease of presence. Courbet's treatment of persons leaves the poses and coloration of those in the paintings of Manet--another 19th century French painter commonly regarded in the "movement" of realism--seem mannered. Such are the precise artistic qualities (instead of stereotyped) which make Courbet stand out as an exceptionally masterful painter as well as a historically important one.

Courbet's interest in photography is another subject. Period photographs, some of nude women, are juxtaposed to paintings. Courbet's interest in the relatively new field of photography was more like a curiosity that there were certain coincidental affinities. Courbet was naturally interested in photography because it reproduced parts of the immediate, sensible world--as he did in his own paintings.

This major study involving biography, criticism, art history, and a catalog of works is built on the Courbet exhibition at New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art through mid-May 2008.


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