Gustave Courbet
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The 19th-century French painter Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) was a big personality, a cultural subversive, a braggart and showman worthy of P. T. Barnum. He was also a paint-handler of exquisite grit and outrageous sensuality—traits that combined into an artist whose greatness just barely redeemed his insufferable narcissism. By the time you’re through with the first gallery of the Met’s “Gustave Courbet,” ringed with 20 or so self-portraits of the artist, you’ll have had quite enough of Courbet.
The arrogance of youth is everywhere in these pictures. read more »
Step Into the Art Star's Studio: Tony Oursler's Hipster Solipsism
I’m mad at the Met. Sure, it’s one of the world’s great museums. read more »
Step Into the Art Star's Studio: Tony Oursler's Hipster Solipsism
I’m mad at the Met. Sure, it’s one of the world’s great museums. read more »
The 'Later' Courbet, Master of Land, Sea, In Stunning Exhibit
Given his provincial origins, the untamed manners he sometimes affected, his appetite for political read more »
In the Drawing Room At the Metropolitan, It's Courbet at 21
Drawing has been called the chamber music of the visual arts. read more »









