JJ. Grandville, from Vie privée et publique des animaux (Public and Private Life of Animals


Paintings Reproductions illustration for La Fontaine fable by Jean Jacques Grandville (1803

1803-1847 Biography Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard, known by the pseudonym of J. J. Grandville. Illustrator, printmaker, painter, draughstman and caricaturist. Born in Nancy, he moved to Paris in 1825. He published different series of satires (pen lithographs to be hand-coloured) such as 'Les Métamorphoses du jour' and the 'Voyage pour l'éternité'.


J. J. Grandville (18031847) (106 работ) (4 часть) » Страница 2 » Картины, художники, фотографы

J. J. Grandville Sep 13, 1803 - Mar 17, 1847 Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard, generally known by the pseudonym of Jean-Jacques, J. J. Grandville or most commonly simply Grandville, was a French caricaturist.


Fables de La Fontaine by J. J. Grandville, 1838. Varshavsky Collection

J. J. Grandville (1803-1847) Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard was a 19th century French illustrator and caricaturist who published under the pseudonym of Grandville. He has been called "the first star of French caricature's great age" Created by: PICRYL - Public Domain Media Search Engine Dated: 1803.


Edições 50kg Ilustradores J. J. Grandville (18031847)

Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard, generally known by the pseudonym of Jean-Jacques, J. J. Grandville or most commonly simply Grandville, was a French caricaturist. He was born at Nancy, in northeastern France, to an artistic and theatrical family. The name "Grandville" was his grandparents' professional stage name.


A Comet's Journey Illustration by J.J. Grandville

He died on March 17, 1847, three days after George's death. Grandville was just 43 years old, but he left behind a massive body of work that ranged across the entire spectrum of graphic art, from political caricature to book illustration.


The Art of J. J. Grandville / AvaxHome

J.J. Grandville: A Matter of Line & Death Cynthia Rose | January 2, 2020 Grandville caricatured by Benjamin (Joseph Germain Mathieu) Roubaud in his "Panthéon Charivarique" He was the first star of French caricature's great age. From Gustave Doré to the Walt Disney studios, his zoomorphic cartoons have countless inheritors.


J. J. Grandville (18031847) (106 работ) (4 часть) » Картины, художники, фотографы на Nevsepic

André Breton, founder of literary Surrealism, acknowledged Grandville as an important inspiration and precursor. In addition, Grandville's innovative format influenced the development of the graphic novel. Considered a significant work in the art of French illustrated books is Grandville's Les fleurs animées, a two-volume book of 1847. In.


J. J. Grandville (18031847) (106 работ) (4 часть) » Страница 4 » Картины, художники, фотографы

With its dreamlike inversions and kaleidoscopic cast of anthropomorphic objects, animals, and plants, the world of French artist J. J. Grandville is at once both delightful and disquieting. Patricia Mainardi explores the unique work of this 19th-century illustrator now recognised as a major precursor and inspiration to the Surrealist movement.


J. J. Grandville (18031847) (106 работ) (4 часть) » Картины, художники, фотографы на Nevsepic

Grandville, J.-J. Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard was a prolific 19th century French illustrator and caricaturist who published under the pseudonym of Grandville. He has been called "the first star of French caricature's great age", and Grandville's book illustrations described as featuring "elements of the symbolic, dreamlike, and incongruous, and.


J. J. Grandville (часть 1). Un Autre Monde (1844) (237 работ) » Страница 5 » Картины, художники

Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard, "Grandville", was born on September 15, 1803, in Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, in northeastern France. His parents called him Adolphe, a name that originated from an older brother who had died three months before Grandville was born, and a name that followed him through the rest of his life.


Jean Jeacques Grandville The Realm of Insects Original Lithograph by J.J Grandville 1852

J. J. Grandville Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard (13 September 1803 - 17 March 1847, France) Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard was a French caricaturist, known under the pseudonym of J. J. Grandville. Born in Nancy, he took his pen name from his grandparents, who had both been actors.


Black and White The Fantastic J.J. Grandville

Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard (September 13, 1803 - March 17, 1847), generally known by the pseudonym of J.J. Grandville, was a French caricaturist. He was born at Nancy, in northeastern France, to an artistic and theatrical family. The name "Grandville" was his grandparents' professional stage name.


J. J. Grandville Les Fleurs Animées Original Edition Illustrated by J.J. Grandville 1847

Grandville the Precursor. This 1934 essay casts the nineteenth-century graphic artist J.J. Grandville as a precursor of surrealism, Walt Disney and George Méliès. Mac Orlan claims that his primary motivation in writing the piece is to connect Grandville and cinema, exemplified here by the Technicolor Disney Silly Symphony, The Grasshopper and.


The Wonderfully Odd World of French Artist J. J. Grandville Antique Trader

J.J. Grandville was the better-known pseudonym of Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard, a nineteenth-century French caricaturist whose work includes scenes of anthropomorphic animals. Born September 13, 1803, in Nancy, France, Grandville learnt to drawn from his father, a painter of miniatures.


JJ. Grandville, from Vie privée et publique des animaux (Public and Private Life of Animals

J. J. Grandville's Illustrations from The Flowers Personified (1849) "Unhappy the man who never had his eyes fill with tears at the sight of a particular flower. Such a one can have been neither a child nor a youth. He can have had neither mother, sister, nor affianced bride. He never loved."


J.J. Grandville A Matter of Line & Death The Comics Journal

Title: Journey for Eternity Artist: J. J. Grandville (French, Nancy 1803-1847 Vanves) Lithographer: Langlumé (French, active 1819-30) Date: ca. 1830 Medium: Lithograph on green paper Dimensions: Sheet: 13 7/16 × 10 1/16 in. (34.2 × 25.6 cm) Classification: Prints Credit Line: Gift of Lincoln Kirstein, 1952 Accession Number: 52.546.19 (1)