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Elles

Poster
1896 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This print was used as the frontispiece to Toulouse-Lautrec's album of eleven colour lithographs, Elles, published in 1896. As the title suggests, the prints provide a glimpse into a private female world. Based primarily in a domestic setting, they are close studies of women engaged in everyday, yet intimate activities such as combing their hair, preparing to bathe and resting in bed, acts that are charged with a mild eroticism. This is reinforced throughout by a sense of voyeurism, as demonstrated in this print, where a woman is viewed from behind as she arranges her hair, seemingly unaware that she is being watched. Scholars continue to debate the significance of the gentleman's tophat, prominently positioned to the left, which could be a subtle reference to the woman's profession.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleElles (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour Lithograph
Brief description
Poster for 'Elles par H. T. L. Lithographies editées p. G. Pellet' by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
Physical description
A young woman viewed from behind arranges her hair before a mirror. A gentleman's top hat is prominently placed to her left, lying amongst an assortment of women's accessories, including a blue ribbon bow.
Dimensions
  • Height: 644mm
  • Width: 496mm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Elles par [monogram]' (Upper left.)
  • 'Lithographies éditées par G. Pellet, 9 Quai Voltaire à Paris Exposées à la PLUME 31, Rue Bonaparte, à partir du 22 Avril 1896' (Lower centre.)
  • 'Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec' (Small inscription in ink by hand, lower right.)
Object history
Elles par HTL. Lithographies éditées par G. Pellet, 9 Quai Voltaire à Paris Exposées à la Plume, 31 Rue Bonaparte, à partie du 22 April 1896.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This print was used as the frontispiece to Toulouse-Lautrec's album of eleven colour lithographs, Elles, published in 1896. As the title suggests, the prints provide a glimpse into a private female world. Based primarily in a domestic setting, they are close studies of women engaged in everyday, yet intimate activities such as combing their hair, preparing to bathe and resting in bed, acts that are charged with a mild eroticism. This is reinforced throughout by a sense of voyeurism, as demonstrated in this print, where a woman is viewed from behind as she arranges her hair, seemingly unaware that she is being watched. Scholars continue to debate the significance of the gentleman's tophat, prominently positioned to the left, which could be a subtle reference to the woman's profession.
Bibliographic references
  • Coutts, Howard and Claire Jones Toulouse Lautrec and the art of the French Poster. Bowes Museum, 2004. 53 p., ill. ISBN 0954818202.
  • p. 179 F. Calvo Serraller and Paloma Alarcó, Picasso. Lautrec. Madrid : Fundación Colección Thyssen-Bornemisza, 2017. ISBN: 9788417173050
Collection
Accession number
E.4125-1897

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Record createdJuly 18, 2007
Record URL
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