Le Courrier Français Poster by Jules Chéret, Lithograph from Les Maîtres de L’Affiche
Art & Decorative
£400.00
Until the mid-19th Century, printed advertising posters tended to be predominantly text-only. During the second half of the 19th Century however, artists began to see new possibilities in the poster medium, linking imagery to modern commerce. By the 1890s, the streets of every great city were emblazoned with large and colourful posters. These not only caught the attention of the public, but the best examples were regarded as true works of art (specifically, as fine prints) to be exhibited, reviewed in journals, collected and reproduced. The spirit of the Belle Époque had given birth to a new artistic movement and in Paris, Jules Chéret, (1836-1932) paved the way for the poster industry, opening his own printing business, Imprimerie Chaix in 1866.
Chéret published smaller chromolithographic versions (in authentic colours) of 256 of the most highly regarded posters of the day, created by 97 artists including Alphonse Mucha, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Pierre Bonnard. Every month from December 1895 to November 1900, subscribers received a wrapped parcel containing four consecutively numbered poster reproductions, often with a bonus plate of a specially created lithograph, creating one of the most influential art publications in history; the suite entitled Les Maîtres de L’Affiche – “The Masters of the Poster”.
“Le Courrier Français” (Plate 49) was created by Jules Chéret, the father of the modern poster, himself. Having trained in lithography in London, where he was strongly influenced by the British approach to poster design and printing, he returned to France in 1866, creating vivid poster ads for the Paris cabarets, music halls and theatres such as the Eldorado, the Olympia, the Folies Bergère, the Opéra Garnier, the Alcazar d’Été, the Café des Ambassadeurs and the Moulin Rouge. He also created illustrations and posters such as this one for the satirical weekly Le Courrier Français.
Original stone lithograph, 1896. Blind stamp “Les Maîtres de l’Affiche, Imprimerie Chaix” on the bottom right corner. Framed and mounted.
Framed dimensions:
Height: 56 cm (22 inches)
Width: 44.5 cm (17.5 inches)



