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Art Deco Pochoir  1  2  3  4

  Click on the thumbnails to enlarge

 

 

Art Deco Architectural Interiors. Etchings. 

Designs by Sue et Mare. 

Etchings by Jacques Villon. Paris C. 1924

Large format etching size varies slightly to standard cream wove at 20 x 14 1/2 inches. 

Colour images shown below are hand coloured pochoir prints.

 

Uncoloured  200.00 ea.

Pochoir 300.00 ea.

Sue et Mare

Louis Sue ( 1875 - 1968)

Andre Mare (1887 - 1932)

Andre Mare was an artist, and studied at the Academie Julian Louis Sue also trained as a painter, but turned to interior design as early as 1905. This lack of a design or craft training led both Sue and Mare to be grouped with the Coloristes in Paris before the First World War. Mare was involved with Duchamp -Villon's Maison Cubiste in 1912, while Sue worked with Poiret until the founding of La Maison Martine in 1912. In the same year, Sue set up his own decorating firm, L'atelier Francais, and began his association with Mare in 1914. This association became a partnership in 1919 with the foundation of La Compagnie des Arts Francais which lasted until 1928. Sue et Mare worked across the spectrum of the decorative arts from wallpapers to furniture. Their furniture used exotic woods and was clearly inspired by traditional French styles. At the 1925 Paris Exposition their pavilion, Un Musee d'Art Contemporian, rivalled Ruhlmann's and the firm also exhibited furniture in the Ambassade Francaise and the Perfums d'Orsay boutique among other pavilions. The partnership ended in 1928 and Sue continued work in France throughout the 1930s.

 

 

tapis 135.jpg (224819 bytes) 119.jpg (256177 bytes) bureau.jpg (109733 bytes) niche 91.jpg (213157 bytes)
Tapis au Point Noue Cabinet de Travail

SOLD

Bureau

SOLD

 

Details de la Niche 

SOLD

faces 115.jpg (155780 bytes)

cote du divan 87.jpg (159830 bytes)

lampadaire  81.jpg (142450 bytes)

Appareils 145.jpg (320785 bytes)

Faces Du Lavabo et de la Fenetre

Cote du Divan      Pochoir colouring

Lampadaire

Appareils D'Eclairage et Tentures de Soie  

SOLD

salle manger 101.jpg (270475 bytes)

plafond  89.jpg (98596 bytes)

salle 109.jpg (246588 bytes)

hotel esders  99.jpg (152442 bytes)

Salle a Manger

SOLD

 

Details du Plafond

Salle de Toilette Ovale

Hotel de Monsieur Esders. Vestibule.    Pochoir 

salle de bain 111.jpg (235253 bytes)

vest 129.jpg (224118 bytes)

desserte 103.jpg (173138 bytes)

Salle de Bain  Pochoir 

SOLD

Vestibule

SOLD

Desserte  SOLD

cote a  73.jpg (188646 bytes)

chambre 121.jpg (234423 bytes)

cote b  75.jpg (175722 bytes)

Cote  A  Pochoir 

Chambre a Coucher

 SOLD

Cote B

cote c.jpg (187063 bytes)

Cheminee 79.jpg (130404 bytes)

pendule 93.jpg (179707 bytes)

Cote  C 

Cheminee  Detail des Bronzes Pendule et Vases

 

 

Jacques Villon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Villon 

Jacques Villon (July 31, 1875 - June 9, 1963) was a French cubist painter and printmaker.

Born Gaston Emile Duchamp in Damville, Eure, in the Haute-Normandie region of France, he came from a prosperous and artistically inclined family. While he was a young man, his maternal grandfather Emile Nicolle, successful businessman and artist, taught him and his siblings.

Gaston Duchamp was the elder brother of:

In 1894, he and his brother Raymond moved to the Montmartre area of Paris. There, he studied law at the University of Paris but received his father's permission to study art on the condition that he continue studying law.

To distinguish himself from his siblings, Gaston Duchamp adopted the pseudonym of Jacques Villon as a tribute to the French medieval poet François Villon. In Montmartre, home to an expanding art community, Villon lost interest in the pursuit of a legal career, and for the next 10 years he worked in graphic media, contributing cartoons and illustrations to Parisian newspapers as well as drawing color posters.

In 1903 he helped organize the drawing section of the first Salon d'Automne in Paris. In 1904-1905 he studied art at the Académie Julian.

At first, he was influenced by Edgar Degas and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, but later he participated in the fauvist, cubist, and abstract impressionist movements.

By 1906, Montmartre was a bustling community and Jacques Villon moved to Puteaux in the quiet outskirts of Paris. There, he began to devote more of his time to working in drypoint, an intaglio technique that creates dark, velvety lines that stand out against the white of the paper. During this time he worked closely to develop his technique with other important printmakers such as Manuel Robbe.

His isolation from the vibrant art community in Montmartre, together with his modest nature, ensured that he and his artwork remained obscure for a number of years.

At his home, in 1911, he and his brothers Raymond and Marcel organized a regular discussion group with artists and critics such as Francis Picabia, Robert Delaunay, Fernand Leger and others that was soon dubbed the Puteaux Group. Villon was instrumental in having the group exhibit under the name Section d'Or after the "golden section" of classical mathematics. Their first show at La Botie gallery in October of 1912 involved more than 200 works by 31 artists.

In 1913, Villon created his cubist masterpieces — seven large drypoints in which forms break into shaded pyramidal planes. That year, he exhibited at the famous Armory Show in New York City that helped introduce European modern art to the United States. His works proved popular and all his art sold. From there, his reputation expanded so that by the 1930s he was better known in the United States than in Europe.

An exhibition of Jacques Villon's work was held in Paris in 1944 at the Galerie Louis Carré, following which he received honors at a number of international exhibitions. In 1950, Villon received the Carnegie Prize, the highest award for painting in the world, and in 1954 he was made a Commander of the Legion of Honor. The following year he was commissioned to design stained-glass windows for the cathedral at Metz, France. In 1956 he was awarded the Grand Prix at the Venice Biennale exhibition.

Among Villon's greatest achievements as a printmaker was his creation of a purely graphic language for cubism — an accomplishment that no other printmaker, including his fellow cubists Pablo Picasso or Georges Braque, could claim.

Villon died in his studio at Puteaux.

In 1967, in Rouen, his last surviving artist brother Marcel helped organize an exhibition called Les Duchamp: Jacques Villon, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, Marcel Duchamp, Suzanne Duchamp. Some of this family exhibition was later shown at the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris.

Many important museums include works by Villon in their collections, including: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; MOMA, New York City;, The University of Michigan Collection; The National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; The Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; La Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris; and Musee Jenisch, Vevey, Switzerland. Leading private collections which include the works of Villon are the Joachim Collection of Chicago, the Vess Collection of Detroit, and the Ginestet Collection of Paris.

 References

  • Tomkins, Calvin, Duchamp: A Biography. Henry Holt and Company, Inc., 1996. ISBN 0-8050

 

 

 

 Note: In lieu of photography, I've scanned the images presented on this page. Due to the relatively large size of the prints in relation to the scanner bed, it was necessary to join together multiple scans to make one image, hence the faint horizontal lines. In addition, the high contrast inherent in these etchings has made it very difficult to accurately reproduce the tonal relationships between paper and ink. The paper is an even ivory wove. The actual prints are much more impressive than that indicated by the scans.

 

Art Deco Pochoir  1  2  3  4

 

  Click on the thumbnails to enlarge

 

 

Note: Please keep in mind the limitations of your computer monitor when viewing items that I have posted. The works have been photographed and / or scanned at relatively low resolutions in order to both conserve file size and in response to the limitations inherent in your viewing screen. I endeavor to present all works as accurately as possible, however slight colour shift and loss of clarity is inevitable.

 

prints Art Nouveau / 19th Century Art Deco / 20th Century

  Art Deco Pochoir  

   

 

 
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