The High Art of the Low Life
Paris in 1891 was a fever dream of electricity and cheap booze. The Belle Époque wore a layer of gold leaf to hide a rotting core. The Eiffel Tower was a new iron splinter in the skyline, and the streets smelled of horse manure and coal smoke. Anarchists planted bombs while the bourgeoisie drank absinthe until they saw green fairies. It was a world of rapid transit and slow deaths.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec captured this frantic energy. He didn't just paint a poster; he revolutionized advertising by treating a commercial lithograph as fine art. To drown out rival posters, he printed 3,000 copies and plastered them across the walls of Paris.
The star of the show is La Goulue, the Glutton. She was famous for her high kicks and her habit of flipping hats off the heads of gentleman customers. In the foreground, a shadowy figure looms. This is Valentin le Désossé, the Boneless dancer. Lautrec used four lithographic stones to create this bold, flat composition. He pulled the viewer into the chaotic heart of the Moulin Rouge, documenting a society desperate to dance before the lights finally went out.
References
Adriani, Götz. Toulouse-Lautrec: The Complete Graphic Works. Royal Academy of Arts. 1988.
Castleman, Riva. Printed Art: A View of Two Decades. Museum of Modern Art. 1980.
Ives, Colta Feller. The Great Wave: The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints. Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1974.
Thomson, Richard. Toulouse-Lautrec. Yale University Press. 1977.