
Art Deco - II
Raphael Delorme
1885 - 1962
Raphaël Delorme ( 1885-1962 )
Raphaël Delorme was a French painter born in 1885 in Bordeaux. At the Fine Arts School of Bordeaux, he studied with the painters Pierre-Gustave Artus and Gustave Lauriol and became a theatre decorator in Paris. Encouraged by his cousin, Madame Métalier, Delorme then devoted himself to painting.
The artist presented his work in numerous exhibitions: the Salon d'Automne, the Salon National des Beaux-Arts, the Salon des Tuileries as well as in Tours and in Bordeaux. Little recognised during his lifetime, Delorme is considered as an important figure in Art Deco painting today.
The influence of the theatre set was visible in all his paintings through the staging of the characters in a monumental architectural perspective. Delorme's carefully crafted design explored different architectural styles, from Antiquity to the Renaissance, and mixed mythological figures and historical references.
Delorme depicted many female nudes in his works, with unusual proportions and postures which resembled the paintings of Ingres, whom the artist greatly admired. His taste for perspective, rigorous geometric shapes and drape was characteristic of the painting of the Art Deco movement that flourished in the mid-1920s.

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme

Raphael Delorme
Tsuguharu Foujita
1886 – 1968
Tsuguharu Foujita
(November 27, 1886 – January 29, 1968) was a Japanese–French painter. After having studied Western-style painting in Japan, Foujita traveled to Paris, where he encountered the international modern art scene of the Montparnasse neighborhood and developed an eclectic style that borrowed from both Japanese and European artistic traditions.
Foujita reached the height of his fame in Paris in the 1920s. His watercolor and oil works of nudes, still lifes, and self-portraits were a commercial success and he became a notable figure in the Parisian art scene.
Foujita spent three years voyaging through South and North America before returning to Japan in 1933. Foujita became an official war artist during World War II, illustrating battle scenes and raise the morale of the Japanese troops. His oil paintings won him acclaim during the war, but the public's view of him turned negative in the wake of the Japanese defeat.
Foujita returned to France in 1950, where he would spend the rest of his life. He received French nationality in 1955 and converted to Catholicism in 1959. His latter years were spent working on the frescoes for a small, Romanesque chapel in Reims that he had constructed. He died in 1968, not long after the chapel officially opened.
Foujita is a much-celebrated figure in France, but public opinion of him in Japan remains mixed due to his depictions of the war. Recent retrospective exhibitions organized since 2006 in Japan have sought to establish Foujita's place in Japanese twentieth-century art history.

Self Portrait
Tsuguharu Foujita
1921

La Vie
Tsuguharu Foujita
1917

Mother and Two Children
Tsuguharu Foujita
1917

LIttle Girl with Doll
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Deux Enfants
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Porte d'Arcueil
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Two women
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Young Woman on a Pink Canape
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Two Little Friends
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Children and Doll
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Three Ballerinas
Tsuguharu Foujita
1918

Dancers
Tsuguharu Foujita
1920

Reclining Nude with Toile de Jouy
Tsuguharu Foujita
1922

Reclining Nude
Tsuguharu Foujita
1922

Interior, My Wife and Myself
Tsuguharu Foujita
1923

Nude
Tsuguharu Foujita
1923

Deésse de la neige
Tsuguharu Foujita
1924

Brothel in Montparnasse
Tsuguharu Foujita
1928

The Lion Tamer
Tsuguharu Foujita
1930

Sleeping Madeleine
Tsuguharu Foujita
1931

Portrait de Madame Y
Tsuguharu Foujita
1935

My Dream
Tsuguharu Foujita
1947

Girl in the park
Tsuguharu Foujita
1957
Louis Icart
1888 - 1950

Louis Icart
(born 9 December 1888 in Toulouse, died 20 December 1950 in Paris) was a French painter, graphic artist, and illustrator.
Louis Justin Laurent Icart was the first son of Jean and Elisabeth Icart. He started drawing early on. His aunt, who was impressed by his talent during a visit, brought him to Paris in 1907, where he dedicated himself to painting, drawing and the production of numerous etchings.
In the studio, where he initially produced frivolous postcards with copies of existing images, he soon designed his own works. Thereupon he received orders for the design of title pages for the magazine La Critique Théâtrale. Icart’s drawings were in vogue during the Art Deco period. Fashion houses hired Icart to create fashion sketches, with which he soon became known. In 1913 he showed his pictures at the Salon des Humoristes. Icart then learned the technique of copperplate engraving and from then on worked with this process. He was now working for the large French design studios and illustrated their catalogs. In 1914 he met the eighteen-year-old "beautiful blonde" Fanny Volmers, an employee of the Paquin fashion house, whom he married later and who was the model for many of his works.
Icart participated in the First World War as a fighter pilot. During this time he made countless sketches and etchings with patriotic themes. On his return, he made prints of his work, mostly using aquatint and drypoint etching. Because of the great demand, he often published two versions, one for the European and another for the American market.
In 1920 he exhibited at the Paris Simonson Gallery, where he received mixed reviews. In 1922, Louis Icart traveled with Fanny to New York City for his first American exhibition, which was first shown in the Belmaison gallery in John Wanamaker's department store and later moved to Wanamakers in Philadelphia. For his fifty oil paintings shown, he received mixed reviews again.
In the late 1920s, Icart was very successful both artistically and financially with his publications and his work for large fashion and design studios. He began chronicling the shift from the fussy fashions of the late 19th century to the more sinuous and shapely world of early 20th century art deco. The popularity of his etchings peaked in the Art Deco era. Icart depicted life in Paris and New York in the 1920s and 1930s in his own style of painting. Success in 1930 enabled him to buy a magnificent house on the Montmartre hill in the north of Paris. In 1932 Icart showed in the New York Metropolitan Galleries a collection of paintings entitled Les Visions Blanches, which received little attention, however, because he did not personally accompany the exhibition.
After the German western campaign, Icart turned to more serious issues. With L’Exode, he created a series of works that document the horrors of the occupation of France in World War II from 1940 onwards. During this time, Icart had to flee Paris and leave behind some of these works, which were only rediscovered in the attic of a Paris art academy together with some of his earlier works in the 1970s.
Icart died in his Parisian house in 1950.

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart

Louis Icart
Erte
1892 – 1990

Romain de Tirtoff (Erte)
(23 November 1892 – 21 April 1990), known by the pseudonym Erté (from the French pronunciation of his initials: [ɛʁte]), was a Russian-born French artist and designer. He was a 20th-century artist and designer in an array of fields, including fashion, jewellery, graphic arts, costume, and set design for film, theatre, and opera, and interior decor.
Tirtoff was born Roman Petrovich Tyrtov (Роман Петрович Тыртов) in Saint Petersburg, to a distinguished family with roots tracing back to 1548, to a Tatar khan named Tyrtov. His father, Pyotr Ivanovich Tyrtov, served as an admiral in the Russian Fleet.
ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE

ERTE
Arthur Szyk
1894 – 1951

Arthur Szyk
( June 3, 1894 – September 13, 1951) was a Polish-born Jewish artist who worked primarily as a book illustrator and political artist throughout his career. Arthur Szyk was born into a prosperous middle-class Jewish family in Łódź, in the part of Poland which was under Russian rule in the 19th century. An acculturated Polish Jew, Szyk always proudly regarded himself both as a Pole and a Jew. From 1921, he lived and created his works mainly in France and Poland, and in 1937 he moved to the United Kingdom. In 1940, he settled permanently in the United States, where he was granted American citizenship in 1948.
Arthur Szyk became a renowned artist and book illustrator as early as the interwar period. His works were exhibited and published not only in Poland but also in France, the United Kingdom, Israel and the United States. However, he gained broad popularity in the United States primarily through his political caricatures, in which, after the outbreak of World War II, he savaged the policies and personalities of the leaders of the Axis powers. After the war, he also devoted himself to Zionist political issues, especially the support of the creation of the state of Israel.
Szyk's work is characterized in its material content by social and political commitment, and in its formal aspect by its rejection of modernism and embrace of the traditions of medieval and renaissance painting, especially illuminated manuscripts from those periods.
Today, Szyk is known and exhibited only in his last country of residence, the United States.

Arthur Szyk. Portrait of Julia Szyk. Paris, 1926.

Arthur Szyk. David and Saul (1921)

Arthur Szyk. Le Talisman, The Lionheart Lies in his Pavilion (1927)

Arthur Szyk. Bar Kochba (1927)

Arthur Szyk. Washington and His Times, Washington the Soldier (1930)

Arthur Szyk. Washington and His Times, The Struggle on Concord Bridge (1930)

Arthur Szyk. The Haggadah, The Family at the Seder (1935)

Arthur Szyk. The Haggadah, The Four Questions (1935)

Arthur Szyk. Tadeusz Kościuszko (1938)

Arthur Szyk. Polish-American Fraternity series, Wilson and Paderewski (1939)

Arthur Szyk. Arthur Szyk, 1942, Anti-Christ

Arthur Szyk. Satan Leads the Ball (1942)

Arthur Szyk. The Nibelungen series, Valhalla (1942)

Arthur Szyk. The Nibelungen series, Ride of the Valkyries (1942)

Arthur Szyk. In Comradeship of Arms series, Joan of Arc (1942)

Arthur Szyk. In Comradeship of Arms series, King Jagiełło of Poland (1942)

Arthur Szyk. Andersen's Fairy Tales, The King and Queen of Roses (1945)

Arthur Szyk. Visual History of Nations, Israel (1948)

Arthur Szyk. The Holiday Series, Rosh Hashanah (1948)
Tamara Lempicka
1898 – 1980

Tamara Łempicka
(born Tamara Rozalia Gurwik-Górsk]; 16 May 1898 – 18 March 1980), better known as Tamara de Lempicka, was a Polish painter who spent her working life in France and the United States. She is best known for her polished Art Deco portraits of aristocrats and the wealthy, and for her highly stylized paintings of nudes.
Born in Warsaw, Lempicka briefly moved to Saint Petersburg where she married Tadeusz Łempicki, a prominent Polish lawyer, then travelled to Paris. She studied painting with Maurice Denis and André Lhote. Her style was a blend of late, refined cubism and the neoclassical style, particularly inspired by the work of Jean-Dominique Ingres. She was an active participant in the artistic and social life of Paris between the wars. In 1928 she became the mistress of Baron Raoul Kuffner, a wealthy art collector from the former Austro-Hungarian Empire. After her divorce from Łempicki in 1931 and the death of his wife in 1933, Kuffner married Lempicka in 1934, and thereafter she became known in the press as "The Baroness with a Brush".
Following the outbreak of World War II in 1939, she and her husband moved to the United States and she painted celebrity portraits, as well as still lifes and, in the 1960s, some abstract paintings. Her work was out of fashion after World War II, but made a comeback in the late 1960s, with the rediscovery of Art Deco. She moved to Mexico in 1974, where she died in 1980. At her request, her ashes were scattered over the Popocatépetl volcano.
Tamara Łempicka
Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka
My Portrait (Self-Portrait in the Green Bugatti)

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka

Tamara Łempicka
Cassandre
1901 – 1968

Cassandre
Pseudonym of Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron (24 January 1901 – 17 June 1968) was a French painter, commercial poster artist, and typeface designer.
He was born Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron in Kharkiv, Ukraine, to French parents. As a young man, he moved to Paris, where he studied at the École des Beaux-Arts and at the Académie Julian. The popularity of posters as advertising afforded him an opportunity to work for a Parisian printing house. Inspired by cubism as well as surrealism, he earned a reputation with works such as Bûcheron (Woodcutter), a poster created for a cabinetmaker that won first prize at the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes.
Cassandre became successful enough that with the help of partners he was able to set up his own advertising agency called Alliance Graphique, serving a wide variety of clients during the 1930s. He is perhaps best known for his posters advertising travel, for clients such as the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits. He was a pioneer on airbrush arts.
His creations for the Dubonnet wine company were among the first posters designed in a manner that allowed them to be seen by occupants in moving vehicles. His posters are memorable for their innovative graphic solutions and their frequent denotations to such painters as Max Ernst and Pablo Picasso. In addition, he taught graphic design at the École des Arts Décoratifs and then at the École d'Art Graphique.
With typography an important part of poster design, the company created several new typeface styles. Cassandre developed Bifur in 1929, the sans serif Acier Noir in 1935, and in 1937 an all-purpose font called Peignot. In 1936, his works were exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City which led to commissions from Harper's Bazaar to do cover designs.

CASSANDRE:
THE NORMANDIE. 1935. Paris. Musée de l'Affiche et de la Publicité

Grand-Sport
Cassandre
1925

Nord Express Paris-Varsovie
Cassandre
1927

Statendam
Cassandre
1928

RAI
Cassandre
1929

Dr Charpy
Cassandre
1930

Triplex
Cassandre
1930

L'atlantique
Cassandre
1931

Dubonnet
Cassandre
1932

Grece
Cassandre
1933

Angleterre
Cassandre
1934

Fetes De Paris
Cassandre
1935

Paris
Cassandre
1935