Henri de Toulouse Lautrec, "La Revue Blanche", Unframed Lithograph on Paper, 23 x 35

$550.00

La Revue Blanche, a lithograph after Henri de Toulouse‑Lautrec, captures the poised elegance of Parisian cultural life through the figure of a fashionably dressed woman draped in a dramatic fur stole and crowned with an extravagant plume‑trimmed hat. Lautrec’s distinctive linework and Art Nouveau sensibility infuse the composition with sophistication, wit, and enduring visual charm.

La Revue Blanche, a lithograph after Henri de Toulouse‑Lautrec, captures the poised elegance of Parisian cultural life through the figure of a fashionably dressed woman draped in a dramatic fur stole and crowned with an extravagant plume‑trimmed hat. Lautrec’s distinctive linework and Art Nouveau sensibility infuse the composition with sophistication, wit, and enduring visual charm.

Artist Bio

Henri de Toulouse‑Lautrec (1864–1901) was a French Post‑Impressionist painter, printmaker, and illustrator whose work defined the visual culture of Paris’s Belle Époque. Born into an aristocratic family in southern France, he settled in Montmartre, where he chronicled cabarets, performers, and nightlife through paintings and groundbreaking lithographic posters. Works such as Moulin Rouge: La Goulue and May Belfort elevated advertising to high art through bold composition, flattened color, and expressive line. Despite his short life, Toulouse‑Lautrec’s innovations in printmaking and graphic design continue to influence modern visual culture.




Important Details

Creator: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Art Dimensions: 32 in. Width, 24 in. Height

Medium/Technique: Color Lithograph

Period: 20th Century

Art Place of Origin: France

Condition: Well Preserved

Reference Number: LAU-A1225-RZB-04