Dec 19, 2007 - Sale 2133

Sale 2133 - Lot 8

Unsold
Estimate: $ 50,000 - $ 75,000
JULES CHERET (1836-1932) [LES ARTS.] Four decorative panels. 1891.
Each approximately 48 1/2 x 33 inches. Chaix, Paris.
Conditions vary, generally A / A-: Matted and framed.
Unlike most of the other highly visible, big-name Art Nouveau artists, Cheret designed very few decorative panels, dedicating his art almost entirely to advertising. In fact he only designed two decorative series, comprising a total of six images: The Arts, in 1891, and La Fileuese et la Denteliere for the Paris World's Fair in 1900. Maindron considered these panels to be "perfect" and suggested that the concept of "placards decoratifs" (neither prints nor posters, but a combination of both) were in fact invented by Cheret. The Arts was a series of four images representing the muses. In celebrating the muses, Cheret is also celebrating his triumph in mastering color lithography. By 1891 he is at the peak of his talent, playing freely with the composition and fully enjoying the pleasure of drawing. Adding to the unique quality of these panels is the fact that Cheret was able to completely play with the backgrounds, as no lettering had to be added to clutter the image in any way. Broido 63, Maindron 56, Reims 307.