


Young Ladies of the Village
Gustave Courbet
$47.00
Select sizeSize guide
- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Young Ladies of the Village (1851–52) stands as one of Gustave Courbet's most provocative and celebrated achievements in nineteenth-century French Realism. Exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1852, the painting caused considerable controversy by depicting three elegantly dressed bourgeois women — Courbet's own sisters — in an open rural landscape near Ornans, his hometown in the Franche-Comté region. At a time when grand-scale canvases were reserved exclusively for historical, mythological, or religious subjects, Courbet's audacious decision to render ordinary figures at near life-size dimensions was a deliberate act of defiance against academic convention.
Painted in oil on canvas with Courbet's characteristically bold brushwork and earthy palette, the composition balances tender naturalism with subtle social commentary. The women offer charity to a young peasant girl tending her cows, evoking themes of class, rural identity, and modern life. The luminous sky and sweeping Jurassic landscape anchor the scene in a specific, deeply personal geography. This masterwork, housed at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, is now available as a premium stretched canvas reproduction with a 0.75-inch gallery wrap, printed on museum-quality matte canvas — bringing the authority and grandeur of Realist painting directly to your walls.
| Artist | Gustave Courbet |
| Year | 1851–52 |
| Medium | Oil on canvas |
| Dimensions | 76 3/4 x 102 3/4 in. (194.9 x 261 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Realism |
| Available sizes | |
| Small | 25 × 20 cm (10″ × 8″) |
| Medium | 76 × 51 cm (30″ × 20″) |
| Large | 152 × 102 cm (60″ × 40″) |
| All sizes include a 0.75" gallery wrap. Ready to hang — no framing required. | |



