 |
|
 |
Gustave
Courbet
Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Paris: 13 October 2007 – 28 January
2008
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: 27 February – 18 May 2008
Musée Fabre, Montpellier: 14 June – 28 September 2008
Catalogue:
Gustave Courbet
Dominque de Font-Réaulx,
Michel Hilaire, Kathryn Calley Galitz, Laurence des Cars, Dominique
Lobstein, Bruno Mottin, Bertrand Tillier.
Paris: Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux,
2007.
477 pages; 140 illustrations (chiefly color); chronology; anthology
of primary documents; bibliography.
Cost: €49
ISBN: 9782711852970
English version: Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ostfildern, Germany: Hatje Cantz, 2008.
Cost: $85
ISBN: 9783775721097
support
NCAW: buy this book at Amazon.com |
 |
| |
|
|
| |
|
The most ambitious monographic
exhibition in a generation devoted to the art of Gustave Courbet
opened in the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Paris, on October
13, 2007. It was organized by the Réunion des musée
nationaux and the Musée d’Orsay, Paris, with the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York and the Musée Fabre, Montpellier.
Courbet, who during his life had a passionate love-hate relationship
with France, was celebrated in Paris as a grand old master. The
lines in front of the Grand Palais were long, zigzagging through
metal pens along the Avenue du Général Eisenhower,
and the galleries were abuzz with engaged visitors. Although
installed in a somewhat cluttered warren of low-ceilinged rooms,
incapable of unleashing the spectacular power of the artist’s
best work, it was one of the most compelling exhibition events
in recent memory for specialists in nineteenth-century art. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Pity
the curatorial team faced with presenting the monographic
Courbet. The literature is overwhelming (name one major historian
of nineteenth-century French painting who has NOT contributed to
Courbet studies.) Courbet was himself a monumental art historical
figure, whose art and public life transformed the profession of
painting, from building a career, to exhibition strategies, to
cultivating a market and manipulating the press. There has been
an enormous amount of scholarly writing on these issues. An exhibition,
however, is limited in its didactic capacities to largely visual
material (at least it should be.) The decision by the curators,
Laurence des Cars, Dominique de Font-Réaulx, Michel Hilaire
and Gary Tinterow, to focus on the paintings at the expense of
the kind of heavy, socio-historical contextualization that exercises
professional educators and designers was felicitous. But how to
organize the output of an artist who contributed meaningfully to
every painting genre in the course of a highly productive, but
wildly uneven 35-year career, whose oeuvreunruly, baffling, outrageous,
gorgeousdoes not fit neatly into any practical art historical
category (not Realism, in the end, nor Romanticism, nor entirely
Modernism)? |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
The installation was rather conservatively
arranged according to chronology and genre: early self-portraits,
early figural works and portraits, large-scale Salon paintings
of the late-1840s and 1850s, landscapes, later figural works and
portraits, nudes, hunting pictures, and finally ‘late’ pictures:
trout, apples, Swiss landscapes. This plan was most successful
in the first gallery, where one saw the young handsome artist developing
his identity, and aggressively positioning himself before the public,
with a series of self-portraits made between 1842 and 1852: the
provincial dandy with an English flair in Self-Portrait with
Black-Dog (1842), with his walking stick and sketchbook perched
behind him; the sensual Romantic with heavy eyelids and voluptuous
mouth, in Man with a Leather Belt, The Wounded Man,
and Self-Portrait with a Pipe; the brow-furrowed musician
in The Cellist; and the gripping Desperate Man (figs
1-3). The latter, used to spectacular effect in the promotion of
the exhibition in both Paris and New York, shows Courbet staring
out, eyes fixed with a hallucinatory intensity, muscled forearms
and hands tearing at his hair |
|
| |
|
|
| |
In addition to posing and preening
(and establishing a kind of artistic celebrity so familiar to us
today), Courbet explored internal states of being in these early
autobiographical paintings. The tension between a materialism that
would eventually be called Realism, and the exploration of psychological
and emotional states more associated with Romanticism, is evident
in many of Courbet’s works of the 1840s and 1850s, most pointedly
in this exhibition in the images of women asleep, dreaming (fig.
4). It is also felt in the most ambitious painting of his
early career, After Dinner at Ornans, a casual, ostensibly
un-posed, scene of a group of men sitting in a small, darkly lit
space made stuporous by digestion, fatigue, tobacco, alcohol and
music. There is an immediate presence to this scene, as we
are invited to empathize with one or more of these introverted
states, and to feel as if we are sitting at an adjacent table in
the same cavernous, smoke-filled room. |
|
| |
|
| |
Particularly given the official
success of After Dinner at Ornans, it seems that Courbet
could have remained a productive genre painter. One glimpses
clues, however, not only of deeper ambitions but also of strange,
dark eccentricities that might not have been contained by a career
as a painter of genre. As Courbet portrays his friend Paul
Ansout, for instance, both of them in their early 20s, the painter
seems to fixate on the weirdly crumpled ear between the sitter’s
fist and cheek, and on the light-struck chair corner jutting out
between his legs. In the wonderful portrait of his sister,
Juliette, of the same period, Courbet becomes fascinated by the
pattern of the chair caning, with its shadow cast on his sister’s
back. There is an unnerving contrast between the crisply defined
lace collar and cuffs and hard-edged pattern of Juliette’s
blouse, and her broad forehead, wide eyes, and the decorative arabesque
of her ear. It is this strange current in Courbet’s
figure painting, described by Linda Nochlin as ‘perverse
realism,’ that inspired such twentieth-century artists as
Balthus and John Currin. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The mildly perverse portraits
of Bruyas feel somewhat appropriate given what we know of that
strange man, the ‘Maecenas of Montpellier.’ Courbet
had an intense and complicated relationship with Bruyas, his most
committed patron, particularly during his early career. In
the three portraits included in the exhibition, Bruyas appears
sunk into his body, his beard billowing over most of his face,
his gaze passive. There are intimations of both sickness and strength
in the most imposing of these, subtitled Painting Solution in
reference to the mission contrived by Courbet and Bruyas to steer
modern art in the ‘right’ direction. Bearing a signet
ring on his index finger, Bruyas’s left hand, veins bulging,
crouches on the large green tome inscribed with the title, Études
sur l’art moderne. Solution. A. Bruyas. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
The effect of Courbet’s
paintings in altering the course of modern art was much more successful
than his collaboration with Bruyas, and the hubris involved in
conceiving, painting and actually submitting a work like the 17
x 22 foot Burial at Ornans to the 1850-51 Salon still impresses.
The opportunity to see this painting outside the Orsay, even in
the cramped galleries of the Grand Palais, was itself worth the
price of the trans-Atlantic flight. Hung floor to ceiling,
the painting wholly envelops the viewer, with the villagers of
Ornans arrayed just above eye-level, the freshly dug grave gaping
at our knees (fig. 5). One is able to engage with each figure
individually, ranging in emotion from deep mourning to distraction,
impatience and boredom. The haunting effect of several female
figures, one of them dead center in the composition, pressing white
handkerchiefs over their eyes with black gloved hands, is hard
to shake. Burial remains a viscerally gripping work in a
way that Studio of the Artist, for all its art historical
centrality as a manifesto, does not, though the chance to study
that signature painting at close range was also extremely valuable
(fig. 6). |
| |
|
|
| |
After his epic paintings of the
early and mid 1850s, Courbet turned increasingly to producing and
exhibiting landscapes. The scholarly estimation of Courbet’s
achievement in this genre has been contested since the 1860s, rising
and falling according to various critical and art historical imperatives.
Further complicating a firm sense of his achievement in this genre
are issues of both condition and attribution, exacerbated by the
painter’s persistent unevenness, and by his technical experimentalism.
Determining the difference between an over-cleaned Courbet, in
which the layers of pigment have been unintentionally removed leaving
an effect of crudeness, and works painted only partially or not
at all, by Courbet can be very tricky. Furthermore, included in
his oeuvre are paintings done quickly and/or carelessly, or under
the effect of the artist’s lifelong alcoholism. Is the problematic
Lons-le-Saunier Grotto of the Sarrazine due to condition,
or is it the work of a clumsy follower/forger? Hung in Paris nearby
(and in New York directly beneath) the pristine Getty Museum painting
of the same subject forced the issue. Alongside other paintings
similarly preserved, the Getty’s Grotto helps establish
for viewers today a standard of complexity of surface and painterly
finesse that should serve curators and conservators dealing with
attribution and conservation issues. Other paintings in excellent states
that come to mind include the portrait from Lyon of Paul Chenavard, Chauveroche,
Valley at Ornans (private collection), the Baltimore Museum
of Art’s Puits Noir, the Shelburne Museum’s Fruit
in a Basket, Girl with Seagulls, Trouville (private
collection), and the Metropolitan Museum’s Fishing Boat. |
|
| |
|
|
|
 |
| |
| Fig.
7. Installation shot of of Gustave Courbet at the Grand
Palais, Paris. Gallery with landscapes. © RMN, Paris 2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
8. Installation shot of Gustave Courbet at the
Grand Palais, Paris. Gallery with landscapes 2. © RMN,
Paris 2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
9. Installation shot of Gustave Courbet at the
Grand Palais, Paris. Gallery with landscapes 3. © RMN,
Paris 2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
10. The Stream of the Puits Noir, 1855. Oil on canvas.
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Gift of Mr. and Mrs.
P.H.B. Frelinghuysen in memory of her father and mother, Mr.
and Mrs. H.O. Havemeyer, 1943. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
11. The Shaded Stream at the Puits Noir, ca. 1860-65.
Oil on canvas. Baltimore Museum of Art: The Cone Collection,
formed by Dr. Claribel Cone and Miss Etta Cone of Baltimore,
Maryland. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
12. The Wave, 1869. Oil on canvas. Staatliche Museen
zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
13. Young Ladies on the Bank of the Seine, 1856-57.
Oil on canvas. Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de
la Ville de Paris. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
14. Sleep, 1866. Oil on canvas. Petit Palais, Musée
des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris. © Petit Palais/Roger-Viollet. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
15. Woman with a Parrot, 1866. Oil on canvas. The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest
of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (20.100.57). |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
16. Installation shot of Gustave Courbet at the Grand
Palais, Paris. Gallery with nudes. © RMN, Paris 2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
17. Installation shot of Gustave Courbet at the
Grand Palais, Paris. Gallery with nudes. © RMN, Paris
2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
18. Installation shot of Gustave Courbet at the Grand
Palais, Paris. Gallery with late paintings gallery. © RMN,
Paris 2008. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
19. The Trout, 1872. Oil on canvas. Kunsthaus, Zürich. |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
20. Young Ladies of the Village, 1851-52. Oil on canvas.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of Henry Payne
Bingham, 1940 (40.175). |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
21. The Preparation of the Dead Girl, ca. 1850-54.
Oil on canvas. Smith College Museum of Art, Northhampton, Massachusetts.
Purchased with the Drayton Hillyer Fund |
|
|
Though they constitute over two-thirds
of his oeuvre, landscapes comprised no more than a quarter of the
paintings within this broader monographic project (figs. 7-9). (And
this despite the acknowledgment in wall texts and in the catalogue
that “Courbet was first and foremost a landscape painter.”)
Many of his greatest moments as a landscapist were represented,
nevertheless, in Paris and to a lesser extent New York. Three of
the best of the Puits Noir series showed Courbet grappling
with the same familiar corner of the river Brême just outside
Ornans over a period of more than a decade (figs. 10-11). Here
Courbet was encouraged by the positive response of collectors
to the subject, but clearly he was also driven by an aesthetic
compulsiveness, a drive to deconstruct the spatial and light effects
of this motif that would later establish the point of departure
for Cézanne. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The appeal of Courbet’s
most iconic landscapes has assured these pictures an unfortunate
fate in the hands of restorers. The complex effects of light filtering
through the leaves and reflecting off the stream and rocky facets
of the National Gallery of Art’s Puits Noir have been
reworked by well-intentioned campaigns of cleaning and in-painting.
The majestic Oak at Flagey has been flattened and made hard
as a board from an aggressive re-lining. Courbet’s blacks,
so central to the power of his palette, seem to be particularly
tricky to clean, affecting all of the Source of Loue pictures.
The National Gallery of Art’s Source, in which the
dramatic black center has been cleaned down to its dark brown underpaint
(with the impastoed rock face in much better condition, as with
all the paintings in this series) is usually relegated to off-site
storage. The Hamburger Kunsthalle version seems to be in
the best shape, and it was thrilling to see it in Paris with the
Albright-Knox and Metropolitan Museum Sources. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Courbet’s inspired production
on the Normandy shore, where the artist was transfixed by the natural
drama of the rocky coastline, was represented by the sublime Wave, (Berlin
Nationalgalerie) churning forth in all its thundering power, and
by the pendant paintings, Stormy Sea and The Cliff at Étretat
after the Storm, exhibited to critical acclaim at the Salon
of 1870 (fig. 12). Missing was a critical mass of the marvelous
tonal pictures of sky, sea and sand that Courbet dashed off during
the summers of 1865 and 1866, so striking in their compositional
minimalism and serialization. The glorious Immensity, (Victoria
and Albert Museum) larger than most of these compositions, is a
testament to the artistic and market success of this series; Courbet
himself was amused at how well they sold, and with so little effort.
Also largely absent in the group of landscapes was more than one
snowscape. The heavy snowfall in Ornans of the winter of 1866-1867
particularly inspired Courbet, leading to some exquisite landscapes
that proved a great inspiration to the next generation of avant-garde
painters. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Courbet’s physical immersion
in his motif, his tendency to collapse the distance between the
beholder and the thing pictured, is most provocative in his paintings
of nude women, every one of them charged with erotic energy. Although Ladies
on the Bank of the Seine participates in the genre of suburban
leisure imagery, of pretty girls in fashionable dresses relaxing
by the river on a summer day, Courbet aggressively mines the erotic
potential of such a scenario, in which dresses come off, bodies
are flung on the bank in abandon, seemingly pleasured by the earth
beneath them (fig.13). In a drugged or post-coital stupor
(or both), the woman in the foreground lasciviously gazes out under
heavy, half-closed lids, her body dissolving under the patterned
folds of her dress. A dense flow of visitors shuffled by
the ample breasts and bottoms of Woman in the Waves, The
Source, and The Bather; the orgasmic Woman with a
Parrot, with the bird’s priapic perch standing dumbly
at the foot of the bed; and Courbet’s erotic masterpiece, Sleep,
all flushed flesh, fingered folds and inadvertent holes (figs.
14-15). There was a hot house, peep show element in the Paris installation,
which had these pictures set in a circular gallery, in the center
of which were more circular walls containing the Origin of the
World, the most celebrated beaver-shot in the history of painting,
placed within the context of contemporary pornographic photography
of similar headless, armless, legless compositions (figs. 16-17).
Here, Courbet is shown to have responded to erotica modernized
by photography, in which fantasy and idealization have been significantly
stripped back to offer up female sex, very real and very physical. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The crucial question of the influence of photography
on Courbet’s art, although thoroughly investigated in recent
scholarship, was persistently posed in this exhibition, guided
by the expertise of de Font-Réaulx, a photography curator
at the Musée d’Orsay. The relationship between the
new medium and Courbet’s imagery was most compelling in the
installation of nudes and landscapes (fig. 9). The originality,
intensity and vitality of Courbet’s representations of landscape
motifs and of nude women were undoubtedly affected by the new visual
modes introduced by photography. Contemporary nude and landscape
photography further sensitized Courbet to issues of framing and
cropping, lighting, and focus, not to mention the realist, “found-in-nature-ness” of
the compositions. The installation of relevant photographs in the
exhibition made the case visually. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Courbet’s painterly investigation of
nature, power, sex and death came to a profoundly moving climax
in the high point of the Paris installation, the gallery of hunting
paintings, a traditional genre to which Courbet made a unique contribution. Himself
an avid hunter, Courbet learned the sport in his native Franche-Comté,
but he had one of his most successful hunts during a visit to Germany
in the winter of 1858-59. The German Hunter presents
the encounter between a small hunting dog, leashed to his master,
and a murdered stag in rigor mortis. The domestic tameness of the
black and brown snouted dog, painted in smooth, careful brushstrokes,
is juxtaposed with the horrific visage of the deer, his eyes bulging,
his tongue hanging out of a gaping mouth, the sharp tips of his
antlers curving menacingly in the light. Courbet’s
fast, violent strokes to depict the deer’s head give it a
dynamic, screaming presence. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
In another epic meditation on the death of
these magnificent animals, Stag at Bay, the beast leaps
to his defeat in a dusky, desolate landscape, his eyes and antlers
turned upwards, mouth open as if crying out, all of this painted
on a grand scale. It is an emotional distillation of Courbet’s
greatest, post-Burial painting, the Death of the Hunted
Stag, among the last great history paintings of the French
tradition. Completed in 1867, this portrayal of heroic majesty
humiliated, persecuted, tortured by a lowly pack of excited dogs
despite the efforts of their whip-bearing master, has irresistibly
biographic associations: Christ’s persecution at the hands
of the Romans, or Courbet’s suffering during the final years
of the repressive Second Empire? |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The hunted animal, trapped and struggling
for life, reaches its most concentrated expression in the late
trout paintings, three of which are included at the end of the
exhibition (figs. 18-19). While the artistic challenge of painting
fish scales has ample art historical precedent, the function of
these images as personal allegory is irrefutable. Painted in 1872
and 1873, immediately after the Commune and Courbet’s incarceration
for his participation, they are both deeply moving and impressive
examples, given his truncated life, of Courbet’s late style.
Equally breathtaking was the adjacent installation of fruit still
lifes, with those from the Shelburne Museum and the Ny Carlsberg
Glyptotek confirming the painter’s mastery in this genre
as well. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
And then it ends, and one wonders what Courbet
would have done through his sixties and seventies had he lived
to paint more still lifes, landscapes, portraits, history and genre
paintings. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The installation of the exhibition at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art had to be by necessity a different kind
of show, that is, not a proper monograph, given the impossibility
of the artist’s greatest achievements traveling across the
Atlantic. The beautifully scaled Met galleries were a relief after
the crowded spaces and low ceilings of the Grand Palais. However,
while there were some very memorable moments, one felt that the
New York exhibition was inherited, with unfortunate alterations,
and that the paintings were made to fit into a rubric, and forced
into an inflexible floor plan. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
After the first gallery, and its splendid
triptych of self-portraits on the central wall, the exhibition
lost some of its energy and focus. The gallery devoted to “Ornans
paintings” did not hold together visually, with the strongest
painting, the Met’s own Young Ladies of the Village, hung
among lesser pictures that failed to engage it in meaningful dialogue,
or enhance or unpack its mystery (fig. 20). (According to Champfleury,
the painting was almost as scandalous as the Burial.) Related
paintings such as the White Bull and Blond Heifer, (Galerie
Nathan, Zürich) the Leeds City Art Galleries’ study
for the composition, the Brussels Musée Royaux des Beaux-Arts’ Landscape
at Ornans, and La Roche de dix heures, (private collection),
none of which were included in the exhibition, would have created
a fascinating case study of Courbet’s artistic process. Opposite Young Ladies
of the Village hung a painting that was somewhat overwhelmed
in the Paris installation, alternately known as Preparation
of the Dead Girl and Preparation of the Bride, the jury
apparently still out as to whether this is a bridal or a funeral
scene (fig. 21). The absence of The Studio and Burial was
predictably awkward. While there was no reproduction of the Burial to
be found, a faint, scale reproduction of The Studio was
screened onto a wall with paintings hanging over areas of the reproduction
to which they relate. These relations, however, were inconsistent
and occasionally misleading as in the Cuvelier photographs of workers,
and most of the pictures were difficult to see properly in their
attempt to hang near their ‘associates’. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The long gallery not so meaningfully titled “Painter
of Modern Life” held nine paintings, mostly figural, along
one wall, and eight along another, resulting in a rather laborious
viewing experience. Extraordinary works, among them two versions
of the Jo composition, were lost in the litany. One of the great
Courbet treasures in the United States, The Girl with Seagulls,
Trouville, a combination genre, portrait, and still-life/hunting
trophy painting, was more fortuitously hung on a short wall in
this gallery, with only one other picture (to which, alas, it had
little to say.) The limitations of the existing gallery architecture
on the installation was also apparent in the crowded gallery of
nudes, and in the necessity to disperse the landscapes beyond the
compact gallery devoted to them. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Whereas in Paris, the integration of photography
into the installation felt more natural, with relevant prints displayed
in cases in the center of paintings galleries, at the Met the photographs
dominated a single gallery, with landscape paintings forced in
along the edges. The more marvelous among them, paintings
such as La Roche Pourrie, Forest of Fontainebleau,
and Calm Sea, felt demoted in service to the curatorial
argument about the exchange between Courbet and mid-century landscape
photography. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
How could one have made the Met version of
the exhibition more compelling? One possibility might have been
to abandon the attempt to survey the whole, and instead conjure
a tighter show of singularly superb works, installed primarily
for impact rather than chronological or typological clarity. Surely
Courbet, of all nineteenth-century French artists, deserves a provocative
installation. Curators could have reconstructed moments of
Courbet’s own exhibition strategy, and his sense of the relationships
between his paintings, of series and pendants, and of large public
paintings versus smaller, more marketable ones. Or what if,
as recently suggested by a Los Angeles artist, the exhibition opened
with the Origin of the World, right there on the central
wall in the first gallery, out in the open instead of discretely
hidden away? Given the pervasiveness of pornographic images in
contemporary culture, such a move would have been less about shock
than establishing relevance. It is a wild idea, and may not have
worked, but wouldn’t Courbet have been pleased? |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The exhibition is accompanied by an enormous
doorstop of a tome, 472 pages, six essays, extensive plate entries,
and back matter including a chronology, an anthology of seminal
primary documents, a bibliography and an exhibition history. Once
again, the question must be posed: what is the function of a publication
like this? Is it to advance scholarship? To serve as a comprehensive,
in-depth introduction to the museum-going public? A reference
tool for scholars? A textbook for students? Given the
extraordinary expense and labor that go into these productions,
it is striking that their function continues to be so ill-defined. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Rather than advance significant new interpretations
of Courbet, or present important new research, this exhibition
catalogue offers musings on several relevant themes in considering
Courbet’s oeuvre today. Though most of the authors have contributed
to the literature on Courbet, none, save perhaps des Cars, could
fairly be called Courbet scholars. There is a general attempt by
des Cars and de Font-Réaulx to place Courbet’s work
within the history of nineteenth century, mostly French painting,
as opposed to further excavations into socio-political context. The
influence of photography, as in the installation, plays an unprecedented
role in the consideration of Courbet’s realism and in the
creation of specific paintings in essays and entries by de Font-Réaulx. Another
reconsideration of Courbet’s complex politics, by Bertrand
Tillier, is certainly welcome given the impassioned, but sometimes
vaguely founded notions of the artist as politically engagé. Tillier
examines the confusion between Courbet’s artistic and utopian
ambitions and the political expectations of critics responding
to his paintings. Bruno Mottin’s essay presents the results
of technical examinations of Courbet’s paintings, sadly rare
in the field, which shed light on the artist’s practice,
and supports the notion of his process as highly experimental and
technically innovative. Representing his museum, Michel Hilaire
writes about the complex and crucial role of the Montpellier collector
and art advocate Alfred Bruyas in Courbet’s project. The
odd insertion of an essay in this book, to accompany the even odder ‘interjection’ in
the Grand Palais installation, on the photography of the Swiss
artist Balthasar Burkhard, was an attempt to connect Courbet’s
project with contemporary art. While the photographs are
beautiful and clearly inspired by the work of Courbet, one wondered,
why this artist of all those affected by Courbet practicing today? |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The catalogue reproductions are mostly high
quality (unlike those in two recent large Courbet monographs published
by Adam Biro and by Éditions Citadelles & Mazenod) and
offer a compilation of good photography of some 140 paintings from
across Courbet’s career that is extremely useful, particularly
given the fact that the catalogues raisonné are almost thirty
years old. Plate entries are quite thorough and elegantly
written, divided among the team of authors listed above. They
are preceded by provenance and exhibition histories, the latter
not always complete. For example, the very first Salon acceptance
of Courbet’s career, Self-Portrait with Black Dog,
is not listed as having been exhibited in Paris until 1882; the
presence of The Peasants of Flagey Returning from the Fair in
Courbet’s crucial 1850-51 Salon contribution is not listed
in the exhibition history. The chronology, written by Dominique
Lobstein, is helpful though it is difficult to identify all of
the paintings he tracks by title (he does not use catalogue raisonné numbers).
Similarly, the location of so many of the paintings are unknown
that one wonders how much of a priority this crucial kind of sleuth
work was while developing the exhibition (and one is made more
impatient for the issue of one or both of the Courbet catalogue
raisonné projects currently under way). It may have
been too complicated logistically to notate which pictures were
included in which venue of the exhibition, but because the checklist
was reduced in New York (and presumably Montpellier) this would
have been helpful. The English version of the RMN produced French
catalogue was published for the Met by Hatje Cantz, and the print
quality of the illustrations were even better in this version,
though it would have been helpful to have the titles of the paintings
in the plate section in both English and French. In the end, the
reader is left with a helpful, though very heavy and expensive
book that commemorates an extraordinary opportunity to steep in
the rich, multi-faceted, consistently confounding and undeniably
powerful paintings of one of the most important artists of the
nineteenth century. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The model for this kind of project is imperfect
in so many ways, not least of which is the fact that the revision
of an artist’s oeuvre that is at the heart of the monographic
mission can only come about on the occasion of the exhibition,
rather than a year before the opening date, when catalogue writing
is due to the publisher. There have been some very interesting
movements in Courbet studies in response to the exhibitions of
his work over the last couple of years, the earliest iterations
of which have occurred at various symposia. The curatorial team
who assembled this epic installation and tirelessly wove together
text for each object, elucidating many of the central themes of
Courbet studies in the process, has granted an opportunity for
a new generation of scholars, artists and the museum-visiting public
to gauge the merits and relevance of the ‘master of Ornans.’ The
State of the Question is very much alive, surely the primary gauge
of the success of Gustave Courbet. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Mary Morton
Associate Curator of Paintings
The J. Paul Getty Museum
mmorton[at]getty.edu |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
© 20089 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Mary Morton. All Rights Reserved. |
|
|
 |
|