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Courbet, Gustave - The Stone Breakers (1850) - Velveteen Plush Blanket

Courbet, Gustave - The Stone Breakers (1850) - Velveteen Plush Blanket

Regular price $42
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Printify

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$42
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Description

Soft enough to reach for. Meaningful enough to keep.

The objects that end up staying — draped over the arm of a chair, folded at the foot of the bed, claimed by whoever sits closest — are rarely the ones you bought for the room. They're the ones that earned it. When you're building a space with intention, a velveteen plush blanket printed with art you chose is exactly that kind of object: it pulls weight on comfort and meaning at once. One-sided print on medium heavy-weight velveteen, 8.85 oz/yd². Double needle topstitch on all seams. Three sizes: 30×40, 50×60, and 60×80. Note: up to 3" size variance is standard for this construction.

Care Instructions

Machine wash cold, max 30°C / 90°F — hand wash extends the life of the print. Tumble dry low. No bleach, no ironing, no dry cleaning.

Art Story

The Brutal Reality of the Roadside

The comfort of the audience wasn’t exactly Gustave Courbet’s concern. In 1849, he stopped his carriage to watch two men breaking stones for a road near Ornans. He didn’t see a pastoral poem or a picturesque scene of rural contentment. He saw a machine made of bone and ragged linen. He saw the crushing weight of a system that offered its constituents no exit.

Courbet painted these laborers on a canvas over eight feet wide, using scale as a deliberate provocation. In the mid-nineteenth century, massive canvases were reserved for kings, deities, and grand historical triumphs. By elevating anonymous laborers to this heroic scale, Courbet committed a visual insurrection. He forced the Parisian elite at the 1850 Salon to look at the very people their industrial progress was grinding into the dust.

The details of The Stone Breakers are intentionally gritty. Courbet used a palette knife to slap on thick, crusty layers of paint that mimic the texture of the stone itself. The workers’ faces are turned away or hidden by shadows. These are not individuals to be pitied; they are symbols of an entire class rendered invisible by the bourgeoisie. One man is too old for this back-breaking labor, while the other is far too young.

Critics screamed that it was socialist art. Courbet didn't blink. He knew that if you couldn't touch it or see it, it wasn't worth the paint. Sadly, the original masterpiece was lost to the WWII fire bombing of Dresden in 1945, leaving us only with photographs of a revolution that the world tried to burn away almost a century prior.

References

Clark, T.J. Image of the People: Gustave Courbet and the 1848 Revolution. University of California Press, 1999.

Courbet, Gustave. Letters of Gustave Courbet. Edited by Petra ten-Doesschate Chu. University of Chicago Press, 1992.

Fried, Michael. Courbet's Realism. University of Chicago Press, 1990.

Rubin, James H. Courbet. Phaidon Press, 1997.

Shipping & Satisfaction

Shipping & Satisfaction

Free shipping on all US orders, always.

Every order ships to US addresses at no additional cost. Allow up to 10 business days from fulfillment for delivery.

Your investment is protected. Material or print defects are replaced or fully refunded — no friction, no negotiation. If the work doesn't resonate aesthetically within 5 days of receipt, reach out and we'll make it right.

One note worth reading before you order: because every piece is produced on demand, we're unable to accommodate returns for incorrect size selections. Consult the product specs before you commit — they're there to make sure what arrives is exactly what you envisioned.

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