My Account | shopping basketMy Basket | Wish List | Advanced Search | Login
WorthPoint: What's it Worth?
Home | Register | Join As A Seller | Resources | About Us | Help

categories
 Advertising
 Architectural/Garden
 Art
 Auction Catalogs
 Books
 Clocks
 Decorative Arts
 Furniture
 Glass
 Jewelry
 Lighting Devices
 Photography
 Porcelain-Pottery
 Prints
 Scientific-Medical
 Silver/Silverware
 Textiles-Sewing
 Watches

 More Categories »



   

Renoir, Giclee Lithograph, The Ingenue,

Email Dealer
View Dealers Other Items
Add To Wish List
Email Item To A Friend

Get an email when more items like this one arrives.
Manage Alerts | Help

Collectibles > Misc. Collectibles


Dealer: Portable Assets
Contact: Fine Art - Email Dealer
Add Item To Basket
Continue Shopping
Price: $199.00 USD  - Currency Converter

Shipping inside United States: Quoted at time of purchase
Shipping outside United States: Quoted at time of purchase

Description: Renoir b1841 Title: The Ingenue Signature: The Artist's signature appears in the plate. Edition: First Edition Size: LIMITED EDITION OF ONLY 99 This piece is numbered on bottom of the image. Medium: Giclee Lithograph Paper: Somerset Paper Atelier: Mott Street Publishing Condition: Mint, never framed. Full Size: 24 x 18 Margins: Full as issued. PRINT DOCUMENTATION INCLUDED, P The information provided above was obtained directly form the, Publisher, Atelier, authorized signer, and a catalog information. This piece will ship to you in a tube. Pierre Auguste Renoir1841-1919, French impressionist painter and sculptor, b. Limoges. Renoir went to work at the age of 13 in Paris as a decorator of factory-made porcelain, copying the works of Boucher. In 1862 he entered M. C. Gleyre's studio, where he formed lasting friendships with Bazille, Monet and Sisley. His early work reflected myriad influences including those of Courbet, Manet, Corot, Ingres and Delacroix. He began to earn his living with portraiture in the 1870s; an important work of this period was Madame Charpentier and her Children (1876; Metropolitan Mus.). Simultaneously he developed the ability to paint joyous, shimmering color and flickering light in outdoor scenes such as The Swing and the festive Moulin de la Galette (both: 1876; Louvre). Renoir traveled in Algeria and in Italy (1881-82), returning to Paris where a successful exhibition (1883) established him financially. He had gone beyond impressionism. His ecstatic sensuality, particularly in his opulent, generalized images of women, and his admiration of the Italian masters removed him from the primary impressionist concern: to imitate the effects of natural light. After a brief period, often termed harsh or tight, in which his forms were closely defined in outline (e.g., The Bathers, 1884-87; private coll.), his style of the 1890s changed, diffusing both light and outline, and with dazzling, opalescent colors describing voluptuous nudes, radiant children, and lush summer landscapes. From 1903, Renoir fought the encroaching paralysis of arthritis at the same time that his work attained its greatest sensual power and monumentality. Despite illness and personal tragedy he began to produce major works of sculpture (e.g., Victorious Venus, Renoir Mus., Cagnes-sur-Mer). Among his most celebrated paintings are: Luncheon of the Boating Party (1881; Phillips Coll., Washington, D.C.); Dance at Bougival (1883; Mus. of Fine Arts, Boston); Lady Sewing (Art Inst., Chicago); and Bather (1917-18; Philadelphia Mus. of Art). Renoir's work is represented in most of the important galleries in the world. The Art Institute of Chicago; the Barnes Collection, Merion, Pa.; Clark Institute, Williamstown, Mass.; and the Louvre have large collections. His son, the film director Jean Renoir, wrote a biography (tr. 1962).

Shipping and insurance are determined after checkout.

Status: For Sale Reference#: 655
Condition: See Description Year: See Description


Dealer Policies: Portable Assets Policy Details

Dealer Accepts: Personal CheckMoney OrderWire TransferPaypal



   




Home | Find a Dealer/Mall | Resources | Join | About Us | Contact Us | Help/FAQs
Privacy Policy | General Buyers Terms | General Auction Terms

© 1996-2008 GoAntiques, Inc. All Rights & Media Reserved.