Pierre Gatier
L'Avenue du Bois de Boulogne, 1911
Etching and aquatint on thick wove paper.
48.5 x 62.5 cm
19 1/8 x 24 5/8 in
(sheet)
19 1/8 x 24 5/8 in
(sheet)
Edition of 125
Signed and numbered.
Vistavka Fine Art
Stand S10
Stand S10
Literature: Gatier 44. Strong impression on a full sheet, bearing the blind stamp by 'Cercle de la Librarie', Paris (Lugt 438). Gatier made a name for himself with aquatint prints...
Literature: Gatier 44.
Strong impression on a full sheet, bearing the blind stamp by "Cercle de la Librarie", Paris (Lugt 438).
Gatier made a name for himself with aquatint prints of precise vision of contemporary life, and of elegant life of Paris in the times of the Belle Epoque. His first important collector was a French fashion designer and art collector Jacques Doucet (1853-1929) whom he met in 1908, and who acquired 155 works of his. Gatie’s prints represent an invaluable testimony of the fashions of the time.
Strong impression on a full sheet, bearing the blind stamp by "Cercle de la Librarie", Paris (Lugt 438).
Gatier made a name for himself with aquatint prints of precise vision of contemporary life, and of elegant life of Paris in the times of the Belle Epoque. His first important collector was a French fashion designer and art collector Jacques Doucet (1853-1929) whom he met in 1908, and who acquired 155 works of his. Gatie’s prints represent an invaluable testimony of the fashions of the time.