Paris Salon of 1853
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- | On the eve of the [[Paris Salon of 1853]], Courbet declared his intention "to do nothing but nudes for the next Exhibition." [[The Bathers]], one of two works in this genre that he exhibited, defied the current preference for timeless, idealized nudity. Eugène Delacroix, a member of the Salon jury, deplored the "vulgarity of the forms" in Courbet's painting, which occasioned a critical uproar. Defending the realism of Courbet's nudes, the critic Jules-Antoine Castagnary countered, "He painted the real, living French woman." | ||
+ | *[[The Bathers (Courbet)|The Bathers]] by Courbet | ||
+ | *[[Les Lutteurs]] by Courbet | ||
+ | ==See also== | ||
+ | *[[List of Paris Salons]] | ||
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- The Bathers by Courbet
- Les Lutteurs by Courbet
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