Description: Alfons MUCHA decorative figures Alfons MUCHA decorative figures, original lithograph from 1906, sheet size 45.5 X 32.5 cm, good proof Alfons Maria Mucha (Alphonse Mucha), born in Ivančice (city of Moravia which was then part of the Empire of Austria, today located in the Czech Republic) on July 24, 1860 and died in Prague on July 14, 1939, is a painter Czech Republic, spearhead of the Art Nouveau style. Mucha then went to Paris in 1887 to continue his studies at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi, while producing a magazine, making advertising posters and illustrating books, catalogs and calendars. "For a skilled graphic designer, it was not too difficult to find work in a Paris with commercial activity stimulated by a new Universal Exhibition - that of 1889"2. Mucha's technical and artistic qualities ended up being recognized and he was hired by the first major Parisian publishing house, Armand Colin3. The only artist available in December 1894, he produced the advertising poster for Gismonda, the play played by Sarah Bernhardt at the Théâtre de la Renaissance where he was hired for six years. His loose style earned him a certain notoriety. He notably produced Lorenzaccio, La Dame aux camélias (1896), Hamlet et Médée (1898). In 1896, he participated in the Cirque de Reims Exhibition and designed the poster for the Salon des Cent held in Paris In 1901, Mucha designed the Fouquet jewelry store at 6 rue Royale (the shop was dismantled in 1923 and is now presented in a reconstructed version at the Musée Carnavalet Shortly after his arrival in Paris, on the advice of his comrade from the Académie Colarossi, Wladyslaw Slewinski, Mucha settled down above a small restaurant (it was said to be a "crèmerie") located on rue de the Grande-Chaumière [ref. desired], next to the academy. With Slewinski, Mucha decorates the facade of this small restaurant then run by a certain Charlotte Caron. This decoration remained for several years but has now disappeared. 720 Alfons MUCHA decorative figures720 Availablity: in stockAlfons MUCHA decorative figures, original lithograph from 1906, sheet size 45.5 X 32.5 cm, good proof Alfons Maria Mucha (Alphonse Mucha), born in Ivančice (city of Moravia which was then part of the Empire of Austria, today located in the Czech Republic) on July 24, 1860 and died in Prague on July 14, 1939, is a painter Czech Republic, spearhead of the Art Nouveau style. Mucha then went to Paris in 1887 to continue his studies at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi, while producing a magazine, making advertising posters and illustrating books, catalogs and calendars. "For a skilled graphic designer, it was not too difficult to find work in a Paris with commercial activity stimulated by a new Universal Exhibition - that of 1889"2. Mucha's technical and artistic qualities ended up being recognized and he was hired by the first major Parisian publishing house, Armand Colin3. The only artist available in December 1894, he produced the advertising poster for Gismonda, the play played by Sarah Bernhardt at the Théâtre de la Renaissance where he was hired for six years. His loose style earned him a certain notoriety. He notably produced Lorenzaccio, La Dame aux camélias (1896), Hamlet et Médée (1898). In 1896, he participated in the Cirque de Reims Exhibition and designed the poster for the Salon des Cent held in Paris In 1901, Mucha designed the Fouquet jewelry store at 6 rue Royale (the shop was dismantled in 1923 and is now presented in a reconstructed version at the Musée Carnavalet Shortly after his arrival in Paris, on the advice of his comrade from the Académie Colarossi, Wladyslaw Slewinski, Mucha settled down above a small restaurant (it was said to be a "crèmerie") located on rue de the Grande-Chaumière [ref. desired], next to the academy. With Slewinski, Mucha decorates the facade of this small restaurant then run by a certain Charlotte Caron. This decoration remained for several years but has now disappeared. Prestalia e-commerce solutions. Alfons Maria Mucha (Alphonse Mucha), born in Ivančice (city of Moravia which was then part of the Empire of Austria, today located in the Czech Republic) on July 24, 1860 and died in Prague on July 14, 1939, is a painter Czech Republic, spearhead of the Art Nouveau style. Mucha then went to Paris in 1887 to continue his studies at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi, while producing a magazine, making advertising posters and illustrating books, catalogs and calendars. "For a skilled graphic designer, it was not too difficult to find work in a Paris with commercial activity stimulated by a new Universal Exhibition - that of 1889"2. Mucha's technical and artistic qualities ended up being recognized and he was hired by the first major Parisian publishing house, Armand Colin3. The o
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Location: Paris
End Time: 2024-11-23T20:26:18.000Z
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