Alphonse Mucha Chandon Cremant Imperial, 1899. Lithograph Poster.
Text below © Paul Page.
20.01.13: texts
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Just got my copy of
Alphonse Mucha: The Complete Graphic Works
One of Mucha's new friends in Mikulov was the manager of a
nearby large estate owned by the wealthy Count Khuen. Mucha
designed an address for the staff to present to the Count's father-in-
law on his sixtieth birthday, as a result of which the Count invited
Mucha to paint a series of frescoes for the dining room of Emmahof,
a castle he had just had built in the forest near Hrusovany. Mucha
quickly found out how to paint frescoes and moved into the castle.
Though he experienced some difficulty in the execution, he had no
shortage of ideas. He also found that living in luxury was not
overrated and made full use of the Count's extensive library, studying art and many other subjects.
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Advertise | Mucha Books: Amazon.co.uk
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Mucha vintage exhibtion posters @ ebay.com (direct link) - just checked & a bigger selection than i've seen anywhere else
"Mucha was saved from starvation by an order for some illustrations for a short story magazine." - Paul Page
and it took my breath away. More details can be found at amazon.com
20.01.05: biography ii
After finishing the murals, Mucha
was ready to go back to Vienna, but Count Khuen sent him instead
to Gandegg, the family castle in the Tyrol. He was welcomed there
by Count Khuen's brother, Count Egon, who was an amateur
painter, and the two men spent many hours painting. Through an
acquaintance of the Count's, Mucha met a painter who advised him
to go to the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich. In 1885 he sat the
entrance examination and was admitted as a third-year student.
Munich was an exciting city for him, and although the Academy
utterly ignored all innovation, his teachers were good and the
curriculum, atmosphere and traditions reinforced his attachment to
history painting. After completing his course, Mucha returned to Emmahof, where he painted frescoes for the billiard room. Count
Khuen was prepared to finance further studies, and offered him a
choice of Paris or Rome. He chose Paris, and arrived there in 1887.
princess hyacinth
Mucha spoke not a word of French when he arrived. He enrolled
at the Academic Julien, where he studied with Jules Lefebvre and
Jean-Paul Laurens, devoting long hours to painting, then more
hours to learning French. His fellow students included Maurice
Denis, Bonnard and Serusier, but he preferred the company of other
young Czechs, ate in Czech restaurants, and longed for his homeland. Count Khuen sent him 200 francs a month to pay for board and
lodgings and tuition fees, but expected regular progress reports and
drawings in return.
In the summer, Mucha met the Count in
Munich and then spent the holidays at Emmahof, where he painted
more frescoes on the castle walls. On his return to Paris, he found a
room on the left bank and enrolled at the Academic Colarossi. He
was hard at work there when, in 1889, he was advised that Count
Khuen had decided to discontinue his financial asistance. It is not
known why the Count made this decision - perhaps he felt that
Mucha did not write often enough and was therefore ungrateful, or
perhaps he felt that it was time that Mucha earned his own living. In
any case, the artist was penniless.
seasons
(1896)
Slewinsky, a Polish friend from the Academic Colarossi,
dragged him away from his hovel and found him a room above
Madame Charlotte's Crernerie in the rue de la Grande Chaumiere,
opposite the Academic. Madame Charlotte was the widow of an
army officer killed in 1870 when Paris was besieged by the Prussians,
and she ran a restaurant for students, whom she treated as members
of her own family. Mucha was thus in contact with students of every
nationality and he heard all the gossip, particularly about available
work. He produced weekly covers for another magazine, La Vie
Populaire, and illustrated a book of fairy tales for Xavier Marmier,
who submitted a number of the designs to the Salon where they
received an Honourable Mention.
Of all the friends Mucha made at the Cremerie, perhaps the least
likely was Gauguin. Gauguin arrived there in 1891, followed shortly
by Willibrord Verkade, a young Dutchman who became one of his
Nabis disciples before converting to Catholicism and joining a group
of Benedictine painter monks at the Abbey of Beuron, from where
he was sent to Prague to decorate a church. Gauguin meanwhile
organised a sale of his own work to finance his longed-for trip to the
Pacific. When he returned from Tahiti two years later, he had no
money, but Madame Charlotte both lent him some and purchased a
number of his paintings, while Mucha offered him the use of his
studio and the two men worked together, each in his corner. As
Mucha prospered, he moved to a large studio across the road and
Gauguin followed. Mucha bought himself a harmonium, which he
soon learned to play. He also took an amusing photograph of
Gauguin seated at the harmonium wearing a shirt and jacket but
neither trousers nor shoes nor socks...next page.
Recommended Reading: Alphonse Mucha Masterworks
pagenat on the vltava
Mucha was saved from starvation by an order for some illustrations for a short story magazine, Le Petit Parisien Illustre, and, a little
later, by a commission to illustrate an epic poem for a Prague
publisher.
20.01.13: books & prints
Direct page links to Mucha books available at amazon.co.uk
& amazon.com
.
Biography
|
Gallery
|
Mucha Canvas Prints
|
Mucha Rarities |
Blank Books Unlined
Bookmarks
|
Books
|
Greeting Cards
|
Keyrings
|
Magneto Notes Lined
|
Mousepads
Notepads
|
Postcards
|
Piezzo Lighters
|
Poster Books
|
Posters
|
Umbrellas
Wooden Pencils
|
Advertise | Mucha Books: Amazon.co.uk
| Mucha Books: Amazon.com
Mucha vintage exhibtion posters @ ebay.com (direct link) - just checked & a bigger selection than i've seen anywhere else
Images © Estate of Alponse Mucha.
All Rights Reserved.