Viewing Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s shadowy scenes of louche Parisian cafes and nightclubs, you get the sense of a man pursuing a pleasure-filled existence. But to truly understand his ...
Showgirls in fishnet stockings and ruffled skirts kicking their legs to the sky flanked by musicians strumming their instruments. This is just some of the imagery captured in the artwork of French ...
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, born on November 24, 1864, in Albi, France, was a scion of an ancient aristocratic family. The son of Count Alphonse de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa and Adèle Zoë Tapié de ...
No offense to your college dorm room, but it’s got nothing on the walls of the Museum of Fine Art’s Gund Gallery. All spring and summer long, they’re playing host to a retrospective of French painter ...
More than 140 works on paper by French post-impressionist artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec are alluring audiences at the Allentown Art Museum of the Lehigh Valley. The exhibit, “Toulouse-Lautrec and ...
A community college would probably be the last place you’d expect to find the works of a world-class artist. It used to be you had to go to the Met if you wanted to see the works of someone like Henri ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Chadd Scott covers the intersection of art and travel. Montmartre, Moulin Rouge, Folies Bergère, absinthe, the can-can, Chat Noir, ...
His full name began with Henri Marie Raymond and his last name ended in Monfa. Most of us could never identify him from any of those. His commonly known last name became synonymous with a genetic ...
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was tiny — just 4 feet, 11 inches, with a perpetually runny nose and brittle bones likely due to a hereditary condition brought on by his aristocratic family’s generational ...
Valadon posed for Renoir and Toulouse-Lautrec before being mentored in her early painting career by Degas, who recognised her as ‘one of us’. Christie's Prints and Multiples and Contemporary Edition: ...
image: 593 by 460 mm. 23⅜ by 18⅛ in. sheet: 635 by 494 mm. 25 by 19½ in. Executed in 1895; this impression is number seven from the edition of 100, printed by Ancourt, Paris. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec ...