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Courbet - Woman with a Parrot (1866)

Courbet - Woman with a Parrot (1866)

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AdamPacio.com

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$210
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Description

Selecting a piece of history for your home is an act of curation that reflects your own journey toward clarity and center. This fine art giclée is more than a reproduction; it is a high-fidelity window into the Modern Art Canon, produced with the technical precision required for professional gallery display. By prioritizing archival materials and local Brooklyn craftsmanship, we ensure that the intellectual resonance of the artwork is matched by its physical presence in your space.

Every print is designed to provide a sense of lasting value and quiet confidence. This is an investment in your environment, an invitation to replace the noise of modern life with the enduring narrative of the great innovators. Whether displayed as a single focal point or as part of a larger historical survey, these prints provide the tactile and visual aura that only genuine museum-grade materials can deliver.

Museum-Quality Craftsmanship

The Paper: 100% cotton Hahnemühle Photo Rag, world-renowned for its beautiful felt structure and archival longevity.

The Print: Genuine Giclée process using pigment-based inks for depth, detail, and an "aura" that rivals museum originals.

The Production: Printed locally in NYC to ensure the highest standards of color accuracy and material integrity.

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.

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