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Courbet, Gustave - Woman with a Parrot (1866) - Matte Canvas, Framed

Courbet, Gustave - Woman with a Parrot (1866) - Matte Canvas, Framed

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Printify

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$55
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Description

Product Description

Framed Matte Canvas: A Timeless Legacy, Elegantly Bordered

The Masterpieces Collection serves as a bridge to cultural continuity, bringing the depth of art history into the modern sanctuary of your home. By choosing a framed presentation, you elevate these signals of human brilliance from a simple accent to a definitive focal point. This framed matte canvas provides a sophisticated, gallery-ready aesthetic that anchors your space in intentionality and grace.

Eleanor, we understand that finding the perfect frame can often be an overwhelming post-purchase hurdle—one that delays the joy of actually hanging your art. We’ve pre-emptively solved this by pairing our archival-grade canvas with a sustainably sourced pinewood frame. It arrives finished and ready to grace your walls, ensuring that the transition from our studio to your home is effortless and immediately rewarding.

  • Premium Composition: A cotton and polyester composite canvas featuring a specialized proprietary coating that ensures vibrant, eye-catching detail and long-lasting color integrity.
  • Sustainably Sourced: Both the pinewood frame and the internal radial pine stretcher bars are FSC-certified from renewable forests, honoring a commitment to mindful stewardship.
  • Safety and Clarity: Printed with UL-certified Greenguard Gold latex inks, our canvases are non-hazardous, non-toxic, and non-flammable, providing a vivid resonance that is safe for every room in your home.
  • Ready to Hang: Each piece comes with sawtooth hanging hardware already attached, ensuring a seamless installation.
  • Artisan Precision: Our frames are available in four colors to complement your unique decor. Due to the specialized production process, please allow for a slight size deviation tolerance of +/- 1/8" (3.2mm).

Care Instructions

Maintenance is intentionally straightforward to ensure your artwork remains a pristine fixture in your home. If the canvas or frame gathers dust over time, simply wipe it off gently with a clean, damp cloth.

The Story

The Calculated Scandal of 1866

“Woman with a Parrot” wasn’t painted by Courbet to capture a quiet moment of domestic grace. He painted it to win a war.

By 1866, the self-proclaimed bridge-burner of French art was tired of being the outsider. He wanted into the Salon, and he knew exactly which buttons to push. Gustave Courbet traded his usual gritty, dirt-under-the-fingernails Realism for a polished, fleshy Academic crossover that the jury just couldn't ignore.

The result is a masterpiece of tactical submission. It features a woman sprawled on white linen, her hair a chaotic explosion that offended critics of the time more than her bare skin. In the mid-19th century, loose hair was a visual shorthand for sexual abandon and moral decay. Courbet leaned into that tension mindfully. He was also settling a score with Édouard Manet. Manet had painted his own clinical, flat version of the subject earlier that year. Courbet’s response was a heavy, sensory assault designed to prove that oil paint could still outperform the rising threat of the camera, whose flat style Manet had been emulating more and more.

This was the era of the Second Empire, where Napoleon III was widening Paris streets to give his cannons a clear shot at the unhappy public while also creating the beauty of the City of Lights in her modern shape. Art was a blood sport. Courbet survived it by delivering a nude that looked traditional enough for the Academy but felt dangerous enough for the popular unrest on the streets. He gave the public the "forbidden" reality they craved, wrapped in the gold frame of institutional acceptance.

References

Clark, T.J. Image of the People: Gustave Courbet and the 1848 Revolution. Thames & Hudson, 1973.

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

Mainardi, Patricia. The End of the Salon: Art and the State in the Early Third Republic. Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Tinterow, Gary, and Henri Loyrette. Origins of Impressionism. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1994.

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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