Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Gustave Courbet - Woman with a Parrot [1866]


Galvanized by the success of Cabanel's ‘Birth of Venus’ at the Salon of 1863, Courbet sought to challenge the French Academy on its own terms with a painting of a nude that would be accepted by the increasingly rigid, and arbitrary, Salon jury. His first attempt, in 1864, was rejected on the grounds of indecency; however two years later, his ‘Woman with a Parrot’ was accepted for the Salon of 1866. While aspects of this painting, notably, the figure's pose and subtly modeled flesh tones, aligned it with academic art, viewers were shocked by the presence of the model's discarded clothing and disheveled hair. Jules-Antoine Castagnary, Courbet's great defender, however, praised the artist for representing a "woman of our time."

[Oil on canvas, 129.5 x 195.6 cm]

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