Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 1864–1901 follow artist
Aristide Bruant / Les Chansonniers de Montmartre
Aristide Bruant / Les Chansonniers de Montmartre
This is the rarest image of all the Aristide Bruant lithographs created by Toulouse-Lautrec. According to Adhemar, this is the "third state" of use of Lautrec's iconic portrait of Bruant, first created in 1893. Bruant used the image, in all its brutal and disdainful beauty, to advertise a bimonthly songbook called "Les Chansonniers de Montmartre," a veritable encyclopedia of Montmartre's performers, led by Bruant himself. As with the first state, it is also printed by Verneau (other states having been the work of Ancourt). "Unlike most members of bohemian Montmartre," writes Michael L. Wilson in the Journal of Western Society for French History, Vol. 36, 2008, "Bruant had a limited education and direct experience of downward mobility, manual labor, and poverty... Bruant recounted that, as his family moved from one working-class neighborhood to another, he learned the strengths and poetry of working-class speech: 'colorful, animated, brutal, cynical, but rich in picturesque metaphors, in bold neologisms, and in imitative harmonies.' Bruant recalls being so seduced by this slang that he would wander the streets of working-class neighborhoods, speaking with and learning from everyone he met."
Imp. Charles Verneau, Paris
literature: Wittrock, p. 9 (var); Adriani, 12 (var); PAI-LXXXIX, 402
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