Description: A charming and original two-page extract from the famous Gazette Du Bon Ton magazine (see below) published in July 1924. The title of this article is "Confidences d'une Crinoline " or Confidences of a Crinoline Dress, embellished with text and pochoir illustrations by Jaqueline Jacques-Duché - see below Many of the famous Art-Deco artists of the day contributed illustrations to the magazine which were printed by using the hand-applied, color pochoir technique . Good condition. Two pages, four sides with central fold as published. Binding holes to the fold - see scan. Page size 10 x 7.5 inches See more of these in Seller's Other Items which can be combined for mailing at no extra costGazette du Bon TonFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchCover of a 1920 edition of La Gazette du bon ton.The Gazette du Bon Ton was a small but influential fashion magazine published in France from 1912 to 1925.[1][2] Founded by Lucien Vogel, the short-lived publication reflected the latest developments in fashion, lifestyle and beauty during a period of revolutionary change in art and society.[1] Distributed by Condé Nast, the magazine was issued as the Gazette du Bon Genre in the USA.[3] Both titles roughly translate as "Journal of Good Taste"[4] or "Journal of Good Style."[3]Contents1Elitism and arts focus2Fashion illustrations3Footnotes4Works citedThe magazine strove to present an elitist image to distinguish itself from larger, mainstream competitors like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar in America and Femina, Les Modes and L'Art et la Mode in France.[5] It was available only to subscribers and was priced at a steep 100 francs per year, or $425.61 in today's money.[6]The magazine, published on fine paper,[2] signed exclusive contracts with seven of Paris' top couture houses – Cheruit, Doeuillet, Doucet, Paquin, Poiret, Redfern, and Worth – to reproduce in luscious pochoir the designers' latest creations.[6] After World War I, a select group of other design firms were added to the magazine's repertoire, including the houses of Beer, Lanvin, Patou and Martial & Armand. However, the editors' choice of designers was arbitrary, and a number of the era's most prominent couturiers never contributed to the pages of the Gazette du Bon Ton, among them Chanel and Lucile. The magazine's title was derived from the French concept of bon ton, or timeless good taste and refinement.[4]The Gazette du Bon Ton aimed to establish fashion as an art alongside painting, sculpture and drawing. According to the magazine's first editorial: "The clothing of a woman is a pleasure for the eye that cannot be judged inferior to the other arts."[4]To elevate the Gazette's literary status, the publication featured essays on fashion by established writers from other fields, including novelist Marcel Astruc, playwright Henri de Regnier, decorator Claude Roger-Marx, and art historian Jean-Louis Vaudoyer.[6] Their contributions ranged in tone from irreverent to ironic and mocking.[6]A George Barbier illustration of a Jeanne Paquin gown, published in the March 1914 GazetteThe centerpiece of the Gazette was its fashion illustrations.[7] Each issue featured ten full-page fashion plates (seven depicting couture designs and three inspired by couture but designed solely by the illustrators)[7] printed with the color pochoir technique.It employed many of the most famous Art Deco artists and illustrators of the day, including Etienne Drian, Georges Barbier, Erté (Romain de Tirtoff), Paul Iribe, Pierre Brissaud, André Edouard Marty, Thayaht (Ernesto Michahelles), Georges Lepape, Edouard Garcia Benito, Soeurs David (David Sisters), Pierre Mourgue, Robert Bonfils, Bernard Boutet de Monvel, Maurice Leroy, and Zyg Brunner. These artists, rather than simply drawing models in outfits, depicted them in various dramatic and narrative situations. Jacqueline Duché , born Jacqueline Cranney onDecember 24 , 1892in Paris and died onMay 4 , 1973in Paris , is a woman of letters and an illustrator of children's stories.Jacqueline DucheBirthDecember 24 , 1892 ParisDeathMay 4 , 1973(at age 80) ParisNationalityFrenchActivitiesWriter , author of children's literatureedit - edit code - edit WikidataSummaryBiographyJacqueline Cranney married in 1914 Jacques Duché 1889-1923. Jacqueline's mother, Marie-Jeanne Franceschi 1864-1944 was a sculptor [1] , daughter of sculptor Jules Franceschi 1825-1893, granddaughter of Emma Fleury , actress at the Comédie Française, herself daughter of landscape painter François Antoine Léon Fleury , l804-1858 and granddaughter of Antoine-Claude Fleury (1743-1822). Jacqueline Duché's uncle was also sculptor Paul Franceschi 1828-1894. [ archive ] [ archive ]Predisposed therefore to the visual arts, Jacqueline Duché was also a woman of letters, allied to the grandfather of her husband Jean-Baptiste Duché 1813-1878, father, in second marriage, of Lucie Duché 1858-1942, wife of the famous publisher, Gaston Gallimard .Best known as an illustrator, she notably illustrated the first editions of the Boscher method , a famous reading method now published by Belin . Jacqueline Duché is also a novelist. Most of his works are illustrated by him. As a decorator, we owe her the Women, Child, Family pavilion at the 1937 World's Fair as well as the first class children's playroom on the Normandy liner .The eldest son of Jacques and Jacqueline, Bertrand Duché 1915-1992, married the grand-niece of the press magnate Henry Poidatz , Françoise Poidatz, cousin of Germaine Mornand née Poidatz. Their second son, Doctor Didier Duché 1916-2010 , was a child psychiatrist. [ archive ]The sisters of Jacqueline Duché, Hélène Cranney1899-1995 married in 1920 with Pierre-René Roland-Marcel 1883-1939 and Anne Cranney 1890-1967 married with René Hachette 1886-1940, their daughter, Claude Hachette 1911-1993, s Married in 1931 to Elzevier Masson 's grandson , Georges Masson, publisher, whose mother was the daughter of the painter Jean-Léon Gérôme .Patient with Alzheimer's disease [ref. needed] , she died in 1973.WorkAs authorFour-leaf clover illustrated by Jacqueline L. Gaillard, 1955Larks, Break Your Nets , 1960As an author and illustratorOld proverbs for your good health , twelve compositions by Jacqueline Duché, Laboratoires Lescène, 1933 [ 1 ]Bauble and its Giants , 1937Bigoudi-Bigouda , 1937Mrs. Flan's Apprentices , 1937Story of the Little Pink Angel , 1943The Blond Ghosts of Soudrac , 1946Outdoor Alphabet , 1946Under the squall , serialized in Lisette , from No. 27 ,July 4, 1948, at number 37 ,September 12, 1948The Mysterious Trio of Mont-Plaintif Lisette No. 54 , 1948Two Rubies in the Shadow , 1955Six in a Turret , 1956Eve and Shepherdess , 1957Nasturtium and her Scot , 1957Zoe the Pretentious , printed in 1997As an illustratorStory of Princess Isée by Pierre Mornand , 1918Two months vacation by Jeanne Suzanne, 1924The Last Love of Madame de Marlborough by Pierre Mornand 1924The forest house by Denise Aubert, 1924The children of the pink house by M. Diderot, 1928The misfortunes of Berlicoquet by G. de la Baume, 1928The marvelous apple tree by G. de la Baume, 1929The Handsome Picoulette Rooster by G. de la Baume, 1929Story of the Poussin Chaussé by Simonne Ratel , 1932Miss Mimi in Paris by H. Lauvernière, 1932Miss Mimi on a trip by H. Lauvernière, 1932Fauvette and her brothers by Ch. Ab Der Halden and M. Lavaut, 1933Miss Tarlatan in America by Simonne Ratel , 1933Miss Tarlatane in the land of cinema by Simonne Ratel , 1934Burnet and Mafouinette by M. Vigneron, 1934Gais refrains du pays de France by Germaine Weill, 1934Rounds Songs and Carols by E. Soubeyran, 1935Last Paris by Henri Didier, 1935The Wettermännlein by Henri Didier, 1935A little girl fallen from the moon by Berthe Bernage, 1937Sweet poppy ladies! by Germaine Weill and Germaine Just, 1938The House with Closed Eyes by Denyse Renaud, 1935Wooden leg by Thérèse Le Caisne, 1945See how people dance all over Europe. By Edmee Arma. Ed. Henry Lemoine et Cie, Paris-Brussels. 1946.Boscher Method or The Day of the Little Ones by M. and V. Boscher and J. Chapron, teachers, 1947Story of a Nutcracker by Alexandre Dumas , Librairie Gedalge, 1948Sur le qui-vive , by Maria de Crisenoy , serialized in Lisette , from January 1 ( no . 1 ) toMarch 26, 1950( # 13 )The Lily House by Delly, 1954My Grandmother's Golden Tales by Charles-Robert Dumas §
Price: 6.5 USD
Location: Los Angeles, California
End Time: 2024-11-13T00:49:14.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.5 USD
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Type: Pochoir Prints
Print Type: Engraving