Description:

Four lithographs by French artist Honore Daumier (1808-1879) from his Les Gens de Justice Series or Lawyers and Judges. Each piece is after the original which were drawn between 1845 to 1848. Each piece measures 10.5 inches x 14 inches. This set was acquired from a Metro Washington DC area estate. From left to right, here are the titles of each; 1. Le Prisonniers. 2. Mr. Le Juge de Paix a Rendu Sa Decision. 3. Vous Etes Jolie. 4. Les Gens de Justice.

    Provenance:
  • This set was acquired from a Metro Washington DC area estate
  • Dimensions:
  • 10.5IN x 14IN (27cm x 36cm)
  • Artist Name:
  • Honore daumier
  • Medium:
  • Lithographs
  • Circa:
  • 1950s
  • Notes:
  • About the Artist: Honore Daumier was born in Marseilles, France in 1808. His family moved to Paris when he was very young. Over the next dozen years, the family lived in eight different apartments in Paris. At the age of twelve, Honore became a messenger boy for a process server's office and then a clerk for a bookstore - jobs that opened up to him every corner of Paris. He sketched everything he saw and finally started studying art with an academician whose idea of instruction was to have his pupils copy plaster casts hour after hour. A year later, the boy enrolled in the Academy Suisse, an informal school where students could draw from the model in the mornings and still hold down jobs. The lithograph was a comparatively new art in those days, but it quickly became Daumier's bread and butter.  He began turning out political cartoons for an ardently antiroyalist magazine called La Caricature.  One cartoon portrayed King Louis Philippe as Gargantua gobbling up every last sou in France.  For such indiscretions Daumier spent six months in prison.  He was the first French artist to get to the hall of fame because the people liked his little drawings, instead of the aristocracy liking his big salon paintings. No sooner was he out again than he started producing more cartoons for another magazine. In 1846, at the age of thirty-eight, he married a young seamstress called Didine and settled down in an apartment on the Quai d'Anjou. Daumier turned out lithographs of arrogant aristocrats, greedy landlords, sour-faced men and nagging wives, sinister lawyers and pompous judges. Sometimes his humor was gentle; occasionally it was savage; it was always perceptive. Daumier made lithographs, 3958 in all, until he went blind at sixty-five. But all along he was painting, though no more than a handful of his canvases were shown in public before the last year of his life. The painter Daumier was a rotund gentle person who cared far more for others than for himself. There were never any extras for Daumier. A year before he died at seventy, a group of friends, led by Victor Hugo, arranged a show of his paintings. It closed dismally with a deficit of 4000 francs. No one ever represented with greater truth the varied type of Parisian character. He became blind in 1877, then died suddenly in 1879 of a stroke at Valmondois (Seine-et-Oise) in a house given him by Corot, the landscape painter.
  • Condition:
  • Excellent

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