Nuit Douce (Silent Night)
Blindstamp lower right in margin

Artist: Henri Jules Guinier French (1867-1927)

Title: Nuit Douce (Silent Night)

Plate: em83

Description: Condition A+

Original Lithograph,
issued by L'Estampe Moderne
Issue Number 21, Jan. 1899.
Printed by F. Champenois, Paris.
Blindstamp lower right in margin.
Signed in the stone lower left.

Presented in 16 x 20 in. acid free, archival museum mat, with framing labels. Ready to frame. Shipped boxed flat.
Certificate of Authenticity.
See our Terms of Sale

 

Sheet Size: 12 in x 16 in / 30.5 cm x 40.5 cm

Price: $350.00


Henri Guinier (French 1867-1927)
"It is on the advice of his father that he entered the School of Arts and Crafts of Châlons-sur-Marne from which he graduated as an engineer in 1886. Then passionate about painting, he followed the courses of Jules Lefebvre and Benjamin- Constant. His career was rapid and brilliant: in 1896, he obtained the Prix de Rome, in 1893, an honorable mention; third class medals in 1896, second class in 1898. He also received in 1898 a travel grant and in 1900 a silver medal at the World's Fair, as well as in 1907 the Henner Prize. He was a founding member of the Salon d'Automne and a regular exhibitor at the Salons des Artistes Français from the early 1890s until his death. 


He discovered Brittany in 1902, during a stay in Bréhat. In Paris, he befriended the painter Le Gout-Gérard, who praised him the picturesque site of Concarneau, then very frequented by painters from all over the world. More than landscapes and seascapes, Guinier, a portrait painter, in Brittany attached himself to the human figure, observed in the activities of daily life. Cornouaille Finistérienne but also Le-Faouët were the places of inspiration for a large number of his paintings, pastels and watercolors, as evidenced by his annual submissions to the Salons." (galerie-drylewicz.com)

 Mucha designed monthly Cover


Not unlike the Maitres de L'Affiche series, L'Estampe Moderne was a portfolio printed between 1897-98, published by Imprimerie Champenois, Paris, contained 24 monthly portfolios, with four original lithographs in each. Each commissioned only for this series. Some of the contributing artists included Mucha, Rhead, Meunier, Ibels, Steinlen, Willette and Grasset.