📦 Sitewide sale now on: 30% off + free shipping 📦
unknown by Gustave Courbet

Rated 4.9/5 By 100's Of Happy Customers

unknown

By Gustave Courbet, 1844

Museum-quality canvas & framed prints

Arrives by Mon, 29 Dec

FORMAT
SIZE
$54.00
8 × 10 in · Museum-grade Fine Art Cotton Paper
Free shipping & returns
90 Day Moneyback Guarantee
Archival inks, fade-resistant for 100+ years

An early 1844 work associated with Gustave Courbet in the Petit Palais collection. This piece signals Courbet’s developing realist sensibility—direct observation, bold handling, and a challenge to academic conventions appealing to collectors of 19th‑century French art.


Have a question? Speak to our friendly art experts at hello@easelhouse.com

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

This work, dated 1844 and attributed to Gustave Courbet in the Petit Palais (Musée des Beaux-Arts de la ville de Paris) collection, belongs to the formative period of an artist who would soon become a...

Don't settle for throwaway posters.

Easelhouse prints are made to feel like real art, not disposable décor. Each piece is printed on museum-grade, 100% cotton hot press fine art paper (330gsm), so it has weight in the hand and a calm, matte surface on the wall.

The paper is thick, smooth, and completely non-glossy, which means no plastic shine, no harsh reflections, and colours that sit rich and even. It looks clean in simple frames, holds up to years of viewing, and still feels like a considered object when you're standing right in front of it.

Most Posters
  • Thin coated paper
  • Shiny, reflective
  • Fades quickly
Easelhouse Prints
  • 330gsm 100% cotton
  • True matte finish
  • Archival & Acid-free
Rolled fine art paper showing thickness
330gsm Hot Press Paper

Cotton Rag

100% cotton fiber, museum-quality base. No optical brighteners.

Giclée Printing

12-color archival pigment inks for deep blacks and rich colors.

Matte Finish

Ultra-smooth surface absorbs light, preventing reflections.

Lifetime Quality

Acid-free paper resists yellowing and becoming brittle over decades.