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Toulouse-Lautrec Henri | 1864-1901 | [ Back | Photos ]
From an Aristocratic Family
Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa
was born as the son of an aristocratic
and rich family in the South of France.
Maybe enhanced by his fragile health,
Henri developed a passion for drawing
and painting. He received painting
and drawing lessons by a professional
artist, Rene Princeteau.
At the age of 12 and 14, the young
Henri broke both his legs. This stopped
the growth of his legs while the rest
of his body continued to develop normally.
Toulouse never managed to cope mentally
with this disability.
Paris Montmartre
The young Henri went to Paris in 1882
to attend different, conventional
painting studios where he met the
artists Emil Bernard and Vincent van
der Gogh. Soon he is more attracted
by the Impressionist artists like
Edgar Degas than by the conventional
painting style and gives up the lessons
in the studios.
Lautrec lived in the Montmartre section,
the nightlife quarter of cabarets,
cafes, restaurants, sleazy dance halls
and brothels. He soon emerged into
this world and became a part of the
bohemian community. In the evenings,
he could be seen chatting with friends
and drinking, and at the same time
drawing sketches on paper. Then the
next day, he would transform the sketches
into paintings and lithographs.
A Passion for Art and Drinking
Toulouse Lautrec exhibited his first
works in the cafes and restaurants
of Montmartre. His paintings soon
attracted general attention and he
received his first commissions.
As his fame grew, so did his consumption
of alcohol. But he managed to keep
up his passion for painting and printmaking
at the same time. He had a few exhibitions
in galleries, acquired general recognition
and was flooded with commissions.
His Lithographs
The lithographs of Lautrec show the
famous personalities of the French
Belle Epoque. Lautrec knew them all
personally - singers and dancers like
Yvette Guilbert, May Belfort, Jane
Avril or the poet Aristide Bruant.
Many of these lithographs were commissioned
by these artists for posters or theater
billboards or as illustrations for
magazines.
The artist created his first lithograph
in 1891. His involvement in the actual
printing process was not very close.
For the best known lithographs like
Le Divan Japonais, he prepared one
or several drawings and sketches.
It can be assumed that the transformation
on a lithograph plate was performed
by a professional printer.
Edition sizes and the papers used,
vary widely. Small editions were made
in 50 or 100 copies, sometimes in
different versions, on Velin or on
Japan paper. Aside from the regular
editions, also hors de commerce copies
can be found. Small editions are mostly
numbered and some were signed personally
by Toulouse Lautrec.
For the popular large editions, poster
paper was used. The edition sizes
were not documented. They are guessed
as something between 500 and 3,000
copies. They are all unnumbered and
unsigned - of course. But they have
either his signature or his initials
HT or a stamp mark engraved on stone.
The graphic work of Lautrec consists
of a total of 351 lithographs and
9 drypoint prints.
Toulouse Lautrec and Japanese Art
The impressionists saw Ukiyo-e art
(Japanese woodblock prints) and were
impressed. And like so many other
artists of the late nineteenth century,
Lautrec had started collecting Japanese
art. At that time, everything Japanese
was en vogue - very fashionable.
Japanese printmaking had a very pervasive
influence on his style. For Toulouse
Lautrec movement and forms were important.
His compositions, unusual perspectives
and the use of large areas of flat
color are undoubtedly inspired by
Japanese prints.
It is not only the form of his designs.
It is the same environment in which
both his works and the art of the
great Ukiyo-e artists were created:
The world of the pleasure quarters,
restaurants, actors, theaters and
brothels. And it is this same world
out of which the commissions came
- prints and posters as an advertising
medium for theater plays or newly
opened tea houses, respectively bars.
The Bitter End
After 1897, the artist spent his time
more in the bars than in his studio.
In 1899 he has a severe nervous breakdown
and is confined to a clinic for three
months. He tries to recover his health
during stays at sea resorts in the
Normandy and at the Atlantic coast.
But he cannot get rid of his alcohol
abuse. His health is completely ruined.
He is getting a stroke with a subsequent
partial paralysis and is taken to
the castle residence of his mother
on August 20. A few days later, on
September 9, Henri de Toulouse Lautrec
died at the age of 36
"Henri de Toulouse Lautrec: Druckgraphik aus dem Besitz des Sprengel Museums Hannover", 1997, Hannover, ISBN 3-89169-123-8
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