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TOULOUSE-LAUTREC, Henri de, May Milton, 1895

Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de (Henri-Marie-Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec Monfa). French painter, draughtsman and lithographer, born in Albi and died in … [Read biography »]

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Signed Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864 - 1901), Original Color Toulouse-Lautrec Lithograph, May Milton, 1895

TOULOUSE-LAUTREC signed, May Milton, 1895

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TOULOUSE-LAUTREC signed, May Milton, 1895 (thumbnail 1)TOULOUSE-LAUTREC signed, May Milton, 1895 (thumbnail 2)
Artist: Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de (1864 - 1901)
Title: May Milton, 1895
Medium: Original Color Toulouse-Lautrec Lithograph
Image Size: 30 1/2 in x 23 1/2 in (77.5 x 59.1 cm)
Sheet Size: 30 1/2 in x 23 1/2 in (77.5 x 59.1 cm)
Framed Size: 48 in x 41 in (121.92 cm x 104.14 cm)
Signed: Artist's monogram stamp (Lugt 1338) in black ink in the lower left with added date of '95.'
Edition: According to Wittrock, this is a state B (of C) impression, laid on Japon paper. This work has also been featured in various public exhibitions including the Kunsthalle in Bremen and the Milwaukee Museum of Art
Condition: Incredibly bold, vibrant color throughout print and in good condition
Price 
:

Item# 1939
$22,000

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Description:

Regarded as one of Toulouse-Lautrec’s most powerful posters, May Milton captures a sense of spontaneity and grace in the artist’s bold use of color and sinuous lines.  Of this work Gotz Adriani states, “This five-colour design…was printed by Ancourt, Paris, for the dancer’s tour of the United States, and it is one of Lautrec’s boldest poster compositions.  The motif was carefully worked out in a drawing in coloured crayon (Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven) …May Milton was an English dancer with a pale, serious face and strong chin who appeared at the Moulin Rouge…wearing a white debutante’s dress with puff sleeves.  Mindful of her liaison with May Belfort, Lautrec printed the posters for the two women (see No. 126) in complementary colours: red and green in one case, and blue and yellow in the other.  The May Milton poster must still have been hanging in Picasso’s studio on the Boulevard de Clichy in 1901, for in his Interior with Bather (Philipps Memorial Gallery, Washington) , it adorns the wall of the studio in the background” (Adriani, 188) .

Created in 1895, this work is a state B (of C) impression printed by Ancourt, Paris and commissioned by May Milton.  Featuring Henri Toulouse-Lautrec’s monogram stamp (Lugt 1338) in black ink in the lower left with added date of ‘95.’  The work is printed in five colors with lettering designed by the artist.

Catalogue Raisonné & COA:
This Toulouse-Lautrec lithograph is fully documented and referenced in the below catalogue raisonnés and texts (copies will be enclosed as added documentation with the invoices that will accompany the final sale of the work) :

1)     Adhémar, Jean. Toulouse-Lautrec: His Complete Lithographs and Drypoints, New York, 1951. Listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné no. 149.

2)     Adriani, Götz. Toulouse Lautrec: The Complete Graphic Works A Catalogue Raisonne, London, 1988. Listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné no. 134 on pgs. 188-9.

3)     Daix, Pierre & Georges Boudaille. Picasso: The Blue and Rose Periods, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings, 1900 – 1906, New York Graphic Society Ltd.: Greenwich, 1967.  “May Milton” featured in the painting, “The Blue Room” listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné no. VI. 15 on pg. 197.

4)     Delteil Loys. H. de Toulouse-Lautrec, seconde partie, Paris, 1920. Listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné no. 356.

5)     Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Toulouse-Lautrec & His Contemporaries: Posters of the Belle Epoque from the Wagner Collection, Los Angeles, 1985.  Listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné no. 18.

6)     Lugt, Frits. Les Marques de Collections de Dessins & d’Estampes, Amsterdam, 1921. Signature stamp listed and illustrated as cat. no. 1338 on pg. 240.

7)     National Museum, Stockholm. Toulouse-Lautrec, Ntionalmusei utställningskatalog nr. 317.  Listed as catalogue raisonné no. 220 on pg. 78.

8)     Wittrock, Wolfgang. Toulouse-Lautrec The Complete Prints, Vol. II, New York, 1985. Listed and illustrated on pgs. 788-9 as catalogue raisonné no. P17.

About the Framing:
Conservation framed with museum-quality archival materials, this work is set in a beautiful, Spanish-style gold and black moulding that gracefully complements this marvelous work.  Its intricately carved detailing serves to accent Toulouse-Lautrec’s ornate composition and even echoes the nature of his stroke and lines that outline the expressive movement of May Milton herself.  Completed with white, linen-wrapped mats and a matching gold inner fillet, this work is set behind an archival Plexiglas® cover.

 

Biography of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Henri de Toulouse-LautrecHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864 - 1901)

Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de (Henri-Marie-Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec Monfa). French painter, draughtsman and lithographer, born in Albi and died in Malrome. The child of aristocratic parents, he had a conventional boyhood, with plenty of riding and shooting. A son of the wealthy and aristocratic Lautrec family line, Toulouse suffered the effects of several hundred years of inbreeding: he was genetic dwarf. Because his dwarfism was due to insufficient genetic variety, he was incapable of retaining nutrients, including calcium, to strengthen bones, promote growth, and prevent fracture. In 1878, and again in 1879, he broke his left leg and right femur. He would never fully recover from this accident, and while his torso continued to develop, his legs remained stunted. In 1882, he enrolled in Bonnat's studio in Paris; when Bonnat gave up teaching, he went on to work under Cormon. In 1885 he settled in Montmartre, a raffish area that satisfied his need to find a milieu in which his physical appearance would be accepted without embarrassment or attention. Montmartre also provided Lautrec with a series of dubious women, from one of whom he contracted the syphilis that contributed to his early death.

In 1888, Lautrec produced his first really independent, mature work: The Cirque Fernando (Art Institute of Chicago), which reveals such characteristic Impressionist devices as the flattening of the picture space, the employment of a rather unusual viewpoint, and the cutting of the figures by the edge of the composition. Peculiar to Lautrec himself, however, is an ingredient of caricature (in the ringmaster, for example) and the use of bold, simplified, non-naturalistic color. The painting already contains most of the elements that Lautrec was to exploit in his posters.

Toulouse-Lautrec's first lithographic print, a poster for the Moulin Rouge, dates from 1891; in the remaining ten years of his life, he was to make nearly 400 prints in black and white and in color, and produce thirty-one posters proper. Lautrec was among the first and, in many respects, the greatest of all poster designers. A man with a strong theatrical sense, interested in individual personality and fascinated by social extremes, he had the right kind of flair, panache and an appropriate, often sardonic sense of exaggeration.

The Divan Japonais or Jane Avril-Jardin de Paris combine inventiveness and keen visual precision with a kind of careless, cynical elegance in a way that is quite breath-taking. Lautrec's influence on the development of the poster was enormous.

Like Degas - but unlike most of the Impressionists -Lautrec was not really interested in landscape; and the lighting in his pictures is often most convincing and effective when it is artificial. His favorite themes were the Parisian dance halls, cabarets and circuses (notably the Moulin Rouge and the Moulin de la Galette). And even life in the brothels, where he spent a great deal of his time-as an observer as well as a customer. His ordered and calculated pictures of the calculating but disordered world of the prostitute are neither lascivious nor coy; and in their unglamorized. acceptance of the facts of real life, they were to be influential in the history of twentieth century art. The young Picasso, for example, was obviously influenced by them.

Lautrec also painted relatively conventional nude studies, and he incorporated in his work in various ways many of the celebrities of the music-hall world: Jane Avril, 'La Goulue', Valentin-le Desosse, Loie Fuller and Yvette Guilbert. As the 1890s wore on, Lautrec's life became increasingly dissipated; and the quantity and quality of his work began to decline. In 1899 he suffered a complete physical and mental breakdown, and was confined to a sanatorium. While he was still an inmate he resumed work (partly to establish his sanity), and on his release he began painting again. His style, however, was now different. In the later works (In a Private Room at the 'Rat Mort', 1899, London, Courtauld Gallery), the coloring is more somber, the handling broader; the emphasis has become painterly rather than linear. His health broken, and worn out by his excesses, Lautrec died in September 1901, surrounded by his family. The contents of his studio were later presented to his native town of Albi.