Toulouse-Lautrec and the circus
/In 1899, during a short period of convalescence in a sanatorium in Neuilly, on the outskirts of Paris, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864−1901), the great portraitist of fin-de-siècle Parisian bohemia, produced a series of 39 drawings on one of his favourite themes: circus performances like those of the city’s Cirque Fernando, the subjects of some of his finest paintings of the previous years. He returned to them when struck by illness as an exercise in recollecting his experiences in Montmartre.
Tightrope walkers, animal tamers, equestriennes, trapeze artists, clowns, gymnasts and horses in complex positions are the focus of his attention in these images, which are steeped in the artist’s personality and exemplify his particular way of rendering popular entertainments and, especially, the energetic, daring performers. Executed in coloured pencils, the drawings make up a sort of animated sequence of circus acts of which we become spectators – up in the stands, down by the ring or behind the scenes – watching the action unfold before our eyes.
Some of Lautrec’s original drawings were published in April 1902 in Le Figaro Illustré. The complete set, kept by his friend Maurice Joyant, was reproduced using a photomechanical process (gum bichromate or photo-aquatint) in two posthumous editions entitled Au cirque. The first, comprised of 22 plates, was made in 1905 by Joyant together with Adolphe Goupil, an art dealer who headed a successful printmaking multinational. The second, also produced at Joyant’s request and featuring 17 prints, was published in 1931 by the Parisian printing house Librairie de France.
The two series of plates and other circus illustrations by Lautrec on view in this exhibition, which were published in the press of the period and in other portfolios, come from the collection of Jean Pierre Gimbergues. They not only illustrate Toulouse-Lautrec’s most personal production but also provide an extraordinary foretaste of a theme that fascinated avant-garde artists.¿CUÁNDO?
WHEN?
Until June 7th 2020
De martes a domingo de 10 a 20h
TICKET PRICES
Full-access ticket
General: 10 €
Reduced: 6 €
Group: 8 €
WHERE?
Sala Noble
Museo CarmenThyssen Málaga