ARTIST: Jules
Cheret (1836-1932)
TITLE: Musee Grevin, Theatre les Fantoches (1900)
MEDIUM: Original Color Lithograph
IMAGE SIZE: 48" x 34.5" (121.92 x 87.63 cm)
FRAMED SIZE: 55.75" x 41.5" (141.61 x 105.41
cm)
SIGNATURE: This work is signed 'Ateliers Cheret' in the
stone in the lower right.
EDITION: A proof before letters. SOLD
CONDITION: The work has magnificent and fresh colors!
This work is in excellent condition.
Jules
Chéret was born to a family of artisans in Paris.
He attended school in the St. Jacques district before
being placed on a three year apprenticeship to a lithographer
for whom he lettered brochures, flyers and posters. By
the age of 18 Chéret had sold some sketches for
covers to various music publishers then decided to move
to London to begin a job drawing pictures for the Maple
Furniture Company catalogue. After six months he was back
in Paris having earnt very little money. However, in 1858
he sold his first poster design for 'Orphée aux
Enfers' for 100 francs. Then a year later he met the perfume
manufacturer Eugène Rimmel.
It was Rimmel
who financed Chéret's lithography studio and his
first success was the poster 'La Biche au Bois' (1866).
His posters became known for their strong colours and
hopeful scenes. In 1879 he won a silver medal at the Universal
Exposition of 1879 and a gold medal at the Exposition
of 1889. In the same year, the Théâtre d'Application
('La Bodinière') held an exhibition of over 100
of his posters, pastels, lithographs, drawings and sketches.
By 1890 he was made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur
and was described as 'the creator of an art industry',
in turning commercial art into a recognised art form.
It was not until 1912, however, that his paintings were
seen by the public, for his work had previously only been
sold directly to clients. The Louvre held a large exhibition
of his works and his talent not only as a popular poster
artist but also as a painter became clear.
Chéret
produced an enormous amount of work in his lifetime. He
pioneered the art of colour lithography, managing to produce
delicate and bright colours where only sombre, heavy ones
had been used before. He created the technical means to
produce posters of all shades in the spectrum using only
three to four lithographic stones. His posters capture
the 'laissez-faire' attitude of turn-of-the-century Paris.
His posters for everything from hat shops to the Moulin
Rouge to cosmetics to beverages capture the atmosphere
of 'la belle époque' perfectly.
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