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  • Cigale, Théâtre de l’Opera-Comique (1904) by Maurice Leloir – Original French Lithographic Poster printed by Devambez

    Cigale, Théâtre de l’Opera-Comique (1904) by Maurice Leloir – Original French Lithographic Poster printed by Devambez

    $ 750

    Cigale, Theatre de l’Opera-Comique
    Artist: Maurice Leloir
    Date: 1904

    In this elegant 1904 poster for the French ballet Cigale, artist Maurice Leloir captures the frigid fate of one of the story’s central figures with remarkable sensitivity. The ballet, written by Henri Cain and set to music by the celebrated composer Jules Massenet, was performed at the Théâtre de l’Opéra-Comique in Paris. Leloir’s lithograph was printed by Imp. Devambez, one of the foremost Parisian art printers of the early 20th century. The poster announced the première of Massenet’s Cigale—a divertissement-ballet evoking the poetic melancholy and grace typical of fin-de-siècle French theater.

    Details
    Artist: Maurice Leloir
    Title: Cigale – Divertissement-Ballet de Henri Cain. Musique de J. Massenet
    Date: 1904
    Printer: Imp. Devambez, Paris
    Theater: Théâtre de l’Opéra-Comique, Paris
    Size: 35  × 22 ¼ in (90 × 56 cm)
    Print Type: Stone Lithograph
    Condition: Nice Condition overall
    Comments: Poster for the première of Jules Massenet’s Cigale, composed by one of the most popular French composers of his time.

  • Carnaval 1894 Theatre de l'opera by Cheret for Les Affiches Illustrees

    Carnaval 1894 Theatre de l’opera by Cheret for Les Affiches Illustrees

    $ 385

    Theatre de l’opera Carnaval by Cheret for Les Affiches Illustrees 1894

    Original stone-lithograph plate printed circa 1896 at Imprimerie Chaix (Paris) for Les Affiches Illustrées. This reduced-format lithograph reproduces Jules Chéret’s exuberant poster for the 1892 Paris Carnival at the Théâtre de l’Opéra.

    The annual Opéra masquerade balls were among the most anticipated events of Belle Époque Paris, drawing fashionable crowds for evenings of music, dance, and masked revelry. Chéret’s design captures the carnival’s spirit of joy and festivity: a central female figure in motion, surrounded by swirling ribbons and celebratory text, rendered in his signature palette of vivid reds, yellows, and blues. As with many of his works, Chéret conveys both the elegance and the playful abandon of Parisian nightlife in the 1890s.

    Les Affiches Illustrées (1896–1899) was a pioneering collector’s journal, presenting reduced-format lithographs of important contemporary posters. Produced under Chéret’s supervision at the Chaix atelier, each plate replicated the technique of the original affiche, allowing subscribers to own authentic Belle Époque poster art in a more practical format.

    Title: Carnaval 1894 – Théâtre de l’Opéra
    Artist: Jules Chéret (1836–1932)
    Date: c.1896 (after the original 1894 poster)
    Size: 21.5 × 30 cm (approx. 8.5 × 11.8 in)
    Print Type: Stone lithograph
    Condition: Excellent “A,” near-mint on fine wove paper
    Comments: Authentic plate from Les Affiches Illustrées, produced at Chaix under Chéret. Crisp impression with strong color. A classic Chéret carnival design, celebrating the pageantry and gaiety of the Opéra’s 1894 masquerade ball.

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