French postimpressionist painter, lithographer,
and illustrator, who documented the bohemian nightlife of late-19th-century
Paris.
Toulouse-Lautrec was born in Albi into one of the oldest
aristocratic families. He broke both legs as an adolescent, and because
of a congenital calcium deficiency, they remained stunted for the rest
of his life. During his convalescence, his mother encouraged him to
paint. He subsequently studied with French academic painters L. J. F.
Bonnat and Fernand Cormon.
Toulouse-Lautrec frequented the Moulin Rouge and other
cabarets of the Montmartre district of Paris, where his wit attracted
a large group of artists and intellectuals, including Irish author Oscar
Wilde, Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh, and French performer Yvette Guilbert.
He also frequented the theater, the circus, and Parisian
brothels. Toulouse-Lautrec preserved his impressions of these places
and their celebrities in portraits and sketches of striking originality
and power. Outstanding examples are La Goulou Entering the Moulin Rouge
(1892, Musee Toulouse-Lautrec, Albi), Jane Avril Entering the Moulin
Rouge (1892, Courtauld Gallery, London), and Au salon de la rue des
Moulins (1894, Musee Toulouse-Lautrec). His alcoholic dissipation, however,
eventually brought on a paralytic stroke, to which he succumbed at Malrome,
one of his family's estates.
Toulouse-Lautrec, many of whose works are in the museum
that bears his name in Albi, was a prolific creator. His oeuvre includes
great numbers of paintings, drawings, etchings, lithographs, and posters,
as well as illustrations for various contemporary newspapers. He incorporated
into his own highly individual method elements of the styles of various
contemporary artists, especially French painters Edgar Degas and Paul
Gauguin. Japanese art, then coming into vogue in Paris, influenced his
use of sharp delineation, asymmetric composition, oblique angles, and
flat areas of color. His work inspired van Gogh, Georges Seurat, and Georges
Rouault.
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