Edouard Chimot 2 compositions (pochoirs) risqué
60,00€
Edouard Chimot 2 compositions (pochoirs) risqué
2 wonderful plates ‘pochoirs’ de 1936
Parts of the book ‘Dialogues des Courtisanes’ by Samotes, Lucien
Size plate : 129 x 186 mm
Size image : 78 x 112 mm
Plates are in mint condition
Info on book and editor (original french) : Émile Chamontin Éditeur, Paris, 1936. Édition limitée à 3260 exemplaires numérotés, dont 3000 sur vélin num. de 151 à 1000. In-8 broché (13×19 cm), sous jaquette illustrée, 157 pp. Cette édition est illustrée de 10 compositions à caractère légèrement érotique de Édouard Chimot, reproduites en hors-texte et coloriées au pochoir dans les ateliers de Edmond Vairel, enlumineur d art à Paris
Attention : extra photos added of the book but book is NO part of this sale
Description
Edouard Chimot 2 compositions (pochoirs) risqué
2 wonderful plates ‘pochoirs’ de 1936
Parts of the book ‘Dialogues des Courtisanes’ by Samotes, Lucien
Size plate : 129 x 186 mm
Size image : 78 x 112 mm
Plates are in mint condition
Info on book and editor (original french) : Émile Chamontin Éditeur, Paris, 1936. Édition limitée à 3260 exemplaires numérotés, dont 3000 sur vélin num. de 151 à 1000. In-8 broché (13×19 cm), sous jaquette illustrée, 157 pp. Cette édition est illustrée de 10 compositions à caractère légèrement érotique de Édouard Chimot, reproduites en hors-texte et coloriées au pochoir dans les ateliers de Edmond Vairel, enlumineur d art à Paris
Attention : extra photos added of the book but book is NO part of this sale
Info on Edouard Chimot :
Édouard Chimot (26 November 1880 – 7 June 1959) was a French artist, illustrator and editor whose career reached its peak in the 1920s in Paris, through the publication of fine quality art-printed books. As artist his own work occupies a characteristic place, but as editor also his ôle was extremely important in bringing together some of the outstanding talents of that distinctive period in French art and providing the commissions upon which the development of their work in a formal context occurred.
In the years before the War Chimot had an atelier in Montmartre, haunted by “jeunes et jolies femmes” who served as his models. His first exhibition of drawings, etchings, and monotypes was in 1912; this was a success, and earned him a commission to illustrate René Baudu’s text Les Après-midi de Montmartre with etchings of what André Warnod termed his “petites filles perdues” (little lost girls). Then came the long interruption of the First World War, during which Chimot was mobilized for nearly five years.
After the war, Chimot rented Renoir’s studio in the Boulevard de Rochechouart. He already had the etchings for Les Après-midi de Montmartre. These were published in 1919, followed by La Montée aux enfers and Les Soirs d’opium by Maurice Magre, Le Fou by Aurele Partorni, L’Enfer by Henri Barbusse, La Petite Jeanne pâle by Jean de Tinan, and Mouki le Delaisse by André Cuel, all illustrated with original etchings between 1920 and 1922.
Chimot’s career got a breakthtrough when he became artistic director of Les Éditions d’Art Devambez. Between 1923 and 1931, from his atelier in the rue Ampère, he oversaw the production of a wonderful array of books illustrated by such artists as Pierre Brissaud, Edgar Chahine, Alméry Lobel-Riche, and Tsuguharu Foujita. He reserved some choice texts for himself, including Les Chansons de Bilitis by Pierre Louÿs (1925), Les Belles de nuit by Magre (1927), and Parallèlement by Paul Verlaine (1931).
Chimot’s work in the last three decades of his life shows a decline in activity and achievement, though inevitably in an artist so richly talented there are flashes of grace and brilliance. In the last year of his life appeared a collection of 16 drawings of female nudes, Les Belles que voilà : mes modèles de Montmartre à Séville, which he regarded as a summary of his lifelong devotion to the female nude. In the 1926 issue of L’Ami du Lettré (quoted by J.-L. Bernard: III), Chimot wrote, “J’ai choisi la femme comme sujet préféré, puis unique de mon oeuvre. Je recherché un modèle au corps élegant et mince avec le côté moderne, un peu androgyne. Je fais beaucoup de dessins dans l’ambiance du texte, puis je choisis parmi eux. La gravure devient une traduction libre de mon dessin. Il me faut de deux à quatre semaines pour une gravure. Je ne fais que de l’eau-forte.”
Chimot died in Paris in 1959.