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Gustave Courbet. Ulf KüsterЧитать онлайн книгу.

Gustave Courbet - Ulf Küster


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      Gustave Courbet

      By Ulf Küster

      Inhaltsverzeichnis

       Prologue The Hammock

       Ornans – Flagey

       Industrialization in the CountrysideRemarks on The Stonebreakers and The Wheat Sifters

       Eugène Delacroix Sees The Painter’s Studio

       With Knife and Thumb

       Origine du monde – Origine de la peinture

       Epilogue

       Notes

       Biography

       Recommended Reading and Viewing

       Literature

       Acknowledgments

       Photo credits

      I can remember my first encounter with a painting by Gustave Courbet quite vividly. It was in 1971 during a visit to the Oskar Reinhart Collection “Am Römerholz” in Winterthur. I was five years old; my father, as usual, took me by the hand and I know for sure that I was puzzled by the peculiar yellow socks worn by the young girl sleeping in a hammock in Courbet’s painting. Could they be some kind of shoe-socks? Even today, after countless visits to this magnificent museum, I am still puzzled by this odd footwear, which seems better suited to a character in a Biedermeier fairy-tale painting by Ludwig Richter. Her feet are naturally immaculate, as if this beauty never touched the ground before laying herself down to sleep.

      Gustave Courbet, Le hamac (The Hammock), 1844, oil on canvas, 70.5 × 97 cm, Oskar Reinhart Collection “Am Römerholz,” Winterthur

      Gustave Courbet’s Le hamac (The Hammock) from 1844 is a masterpiece, a dreamlike vision in every sense of the word. But what does the painting depict? Is it Courbet’s dream or the sleeping girl’s? One sees a forest clearing; a hammock is stretched over a path that leads in turn to another clearing in the background. A girl lies in it and sleeps, half in sunshine, half in shade. She wears a garland of flowers in her loose blond hair. The weather is apparently very warm because she has removed her blue silk shawl and opened her bodice, lined in yellow, underneath which her breasts are just visible through transparent gauze. The girl’s legs hang down from the hammock, feet crossed, her skirt hiked up to reveal calves clad in white stockings. She holds firmly onto the edge of the hammock with her right hand, while her left hand extends over her head in a gesture typical of sleeping persons. Her chin rests on her chest and the expression on her face has something equally lascivious and innocent about it. And in general she seems virginal and a little wicked at the same time. The dream she is presently dreaming is surely very pleasant. It is a pity that it will soon come to an end, because she is about to fall off the hammock. Her hair, which resembles a waterfall, presages her imminent plunge to the ground. She will not fall onto the path itself but rather into shallow, dark water, which will wrench her from her reverie.

      This painting often reminds me of two verses from “Frühlingstraum” [Dream of Spring], a poem from Wilhelm Müller’s Winterreise [Winter Journey] cycle published in 1823 and set to music by Franz Schubert. They concern the abrupt shift from the world of dreams to that of reality, which for Müller was a sign of the difference between the idea of freedom and the reality of suppression during the Restoration and the period leading up to the March Revolution of 1848:

      Ich träumte von Lieb’ um Liebe,

      Von einer schönen Maid,

      Von Herzen und von Küssen,

      Von Wonne und Seligkeit.

      Und als die Hähne krähten,

      Da ward mein Herze wach;

      Nun sitz’ ich hier alleine

      Und denke dem Traume nach.

      [I dreamt of mutual love,

      Of a lovely maiden,

      Of embracing and kissing,

      Of joy and rapture.

      And when the cocks crowed

      My heart awoke;

      Now I sit here alone

      And reflect upon my dream.]1

      Does Courbet’s Hammock depict the transition from an idealized world to a harsh reality? Is this image of sleep shortly before it comes to an abrupt end also about the end of an era that can be designated “Romantic”? The fact that this painting might unexpectedly contain concealed messages still occupies me today. The garland the young woman wears in her hair is not an ivy wreath, as has frequently been claimed.2 It is in fact made from black bryony, a medicinal plant with heart-shaped leaves and red berries that, as the French name unmistakably indicates, is traditionally used to treat bruises: “herbe aux femmes battues” (herb of battered women).3 Other vernacular names include “racine vierge” (maiden root) or “sceau de Notre Dame,” which can be translated as “seal of Our Lady.” Both names indicate a further function: the plant seems to have been employed as a contraceptive.4 If Courbet was aware of this, which is likely, then the rude awakening that will follow upon sleep would take on a very different meaning here.

      The year before completing this painting, Courbet depicted himself in a self-portrait that was selected in 1844 for the annual public Salon exhibition in Paris—his debut. The Portrait de l’artiste, known as Courbet au chien noir (Portrait of the Artist, known as Courbet with a Black Dog, front cover) shows him as a fashionably dressed Romantic wearing plaid trousers, a dapper frock coat, and a hat adorning his magnificently curly head of hair like some murky halo. The artist is seen resting during a walk; he holds a pipe in his hand, while his walking stick and sketchbook lean against the rocks behind him. It appears as if he has given himself over to melancholy, and his glance, looking down his nose at the viewer, seems to underscore the distance between himself and his audience, as if the latter will never be in a position to understand him. And the glance of the dog seated next to the painter also seems to say: “I am the only one who is faithful to you.” The background, freely painted—probably with a palette knife—and left unfinished, is conspicuous. The painting depicts Courbet in the mood he was in when he imagined the women of his dreams in forest clearings, yet not without recalling the unwanted consequences of sexual exuberance.

      Eugène Delacroix, La mort d’Ophélie (The Death of Ophelia), 1844, oil on canvas, 55 × 64 cm, Oskar Reinhart Collection “Am Römerholz,” Winterthur

      The Reinhart Collection likewise houses a painting made by Eugène Delacroix in 1844, the same year as Courbet’s Hammock, namely La mort d’Ophélie (The Death of Ophelia). Delacroix (1798–1863), the most important artist of the Romantic movement in France, was over twenty years Courbet’s senior (1819–1877). Here again the painting concerns a young woman and water: in Delacroix’s painting, however, she has already fallen into the water, both literally and figuratively. Delacroix’s Ophelia is somewhat more buxom compared to Courbet’s sleeping girl, and with her completely exposed upper body I always felt her to be much more erotic than the girl on the hammock. As is often the case with Delacroix, his work is a painted elaboration of a scene described in William Shakespeare’s tragedy Hamlet, though less ambiguous than Courbet’s cryptic and much more subtle painting.

      But one thing I will never understand is how Ophelia could


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