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Filiger, Charles - La Vierge (1895)

Filiger, Charles - La Vierge (1895)

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AdamPacio.com

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$210
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Description

Selecting a piece of history for your home is an act of curation that reflects your own journey toward clarity and center. This fine art giclée is more than a reproduction; it is a high-fidelity window into the Modern Art Canon, produced with the technical precision required for professional gallery display. By prioritizing archival materials and local Brooklyn craftsmanship, we ensure that the intellectual resonance of the artwork is matched by its physical presence in your space.

Every print is designed to provide a sense of lasting value and quiet confidence. This is an investment in your environment, an invitation to replace the noise of modern life with the enduring narrative of the great innovators. Whether displayed as a single focal point or as part of a larger historical survey, these prints provide the tactile and visual aura that only genuine museum-grade materials can deliver.

Museum-Quality Craftsmanship

The Paper: 100% cotton Hahnemühle Photo Rag, world-renowned for its beautiful felt structure and archival longevity.

The Print: Genuine Giclée process using pigment-based inks for depth, detail, and an "aura" that rivals museum originals.

The Production: Printed locally in NYC to ensure the highest standards of color accuracy and material integrity.

The Story

The Geometry of the Sacred

Charles Filiger lived at the edge of the world because the center was too loud. He spent his days in Brittany hiding from the noise, fueled by mysticism, cheap absinthe, and a vision of the divine that didn’t look like anything else in 1895. Gauguin called him a genius and Gauguin was not a man prone to handing out easy compliments. While the rest of the world was chasing the sun with the Impressionists, Filiger was looking backward to Byzantium and forward to a future no one had named yet.

His 1895 work La Vierge is a tiny miracle on cardboard. It’s only thirty centimeters tall but it carries the weight of a cathedral. He used gouache and gold leaf to create a space where the sacred met the mathematical. The face of the Virgin is not a soft human portrait, but a collection of geometric planes and sharp lines that predict the formal experiments of Cubism decades before they became fashionable in Paris.

Filiger was part of the Nabis circle and showed at the Salon de la Rose+Croix but he remained an outsider by choice. He preferred the damp earth of the coast and the glow of his own internal light. The gold backgrounds in his work were not just decorative. They were a way to lift modern religious imagery out of the dirt and into the eternal. He died in 1928 alone and mostly forgotten by the mainstream but the work remains as a testament to what happens when a man stops looking at the world and starts looking through it.

References

Filiger, Charles. La Vierge. 1895. Gouache and gold leaf on cardboard. Private Collection.

Jaworska, Wladyslawa. Gauguin and the Pont-Aven School. Greenwich, Connecticut: New York Graphic Society, 1972.

Pincus-Witten, Robert. Occult Symbolism in France: Josephin Peladan and the Salons de la Rose-Croix. New York: Garland Publishing, 1976.

Shipping & Satisfaction

Shipping & Satisfaction

Free shipping on all US orders, always.

Every order ships to US addresses at no additional cost. Allow up to 10 business days from fulfillment for delivery.

Your investment is protected. Material or print defects are replaced or fully refunded — no friction, no negotiation. If the work doesn't resonate aesthetically within 5 days of receipt, reach out and we'll make it right.

One note worth reading before you order: because every piece is produced on demand, we're unable to accommodate returns for incorrect size selections. Consult the product specs before you commit — they're there to make sure what arrives is exactly what you envisioned.

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