Trisha Shetty (Editor)

The kill of deer

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Year
  
about 1867

Artist
  
Gustave Courbet

Period
  
Realism

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Created
  
1866–1867

Genre
  
History painting

The kill of deer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsbb

Dimensions
  
355 cm × 505 cm (140 in × 199 in)

Location
  
Museum of Fine Arts of Besançon, Besançon

Similar
  
Gustave Courbet artwork, Realism artwork, History paintings

The kill of deer (L'Hallali au cerf in French), is a very large picture (355 by 505 cm), representing a hunting scene, painted in 1867 by Gustave Courbet. The picture is currently on display in the Musée d'Orsay of Paris.

Contents

History

The painting was done during the winter of 1866-1867. It is in the large format newly adopted by Courbet, as also in A Burial at Ornans and The Artist's Studio. The work was exhibited at the French art salons and academies of 1869. The picture caused some scandal, major formats being previously reserved for noble history paintings rather than hunting scenes.

Iconography

The scene shows a deer attacked by a pack of hunting dogs and collapsed on the snowy ground. Two characters are on the right. The drill is Cusenier Jules, a resident of Ornans while the man on horseback is Felix Gaudy, of Vuillafans. L'Hallali is in the tradition of representation of the scene hunt, from the seventeenth century. Courbet uses a harsh realistic representation closer to Flemish models. Hunting scenes are common in the paintings of Courbet; every step of the chase is represented

Influences

There is another influence in this painting, that of The Massacre at Chios (1824) by Eugène Delacroix (illustrated). His influence is reflected particularly through the mounted character.

References

The kill of deer Wikipedia


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