Rose (1898) Printmaking by Alphonse Mucha

Not For Sale

Sold by Artmajeur Editions

Buy a print

This print is available in several sizes.

$27.23
$46.84
$101.30
Customer's reviews Excellent
Artists get paid their royalties for each sales

Sold by Artmajeur Editions

  • Original Artwork Printmaking, Lithography
  • Dimensions Dimensions are available on request
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Portrait
L'œuvre intitulée "Rose" d'Alphonse Mucha est un parfait exemple du style Art nouveau, qui se caractérise par des formes naturelles, des lignes élégantes et des motifs floraux. La composition présente une femme élégante au centre, vêtue d'une robe fluide qui épouse ses formes avec grâce. Ses cheveux bruns sont ornés d'une[...]
L'œuvre intitulée "Rose" d'Alphonse Mucha est un parfait exemple du style Art nouveau, qui se caractérise par des formes naturelles, des lignes élégantes et des motifs floraux. La composition présente une femme élégante au centre, vêtue d'une robe fluide qui épouse ses formes avec grâce. Ses cheveux bruns sont ornés d'une guirlande de roses, et sa coiffure ondulée ajoute à la sensation de mouvement naturel.

Autour de la figure centrale, un abondant motif de roses et de feuillages crée une bordure organique. Les roses de différentes couleurs, principalement dans des tons de rose et de jaune, semblent presque enrouler la femme dans leur épanouissement. Le fond de l'image intègre des éléments décoratifs stylisés, typiques de l'œuvre de Mucha, avec des formes circulaires et des motifs qui complètent l'image sans la submerger.

La femme au centre de l'image a un regard pénétrant et engageant, attirant le spectateur dans l'œuvre. Elle tient une rose à deux mains, comme pour en souligner la beauté centrale. La combinaison des couleurs, la délicatesse du trait et la symétrie des formes sont harmonieuses et invitent à une appréciation esthétique calme.

Related themes

RoseArt NouveauFemmeFleur

Automatically translated
Artist represented by Artmajeur Editions
Follow
Mucha was famous for his commercial posters, which had a wide audience, but he also worked in a variety of other media, including furniture, jewelry, and theatrical sets. He mostly worked in Vienna and Paris,[...]

Mucha was famous for his commercial posters, which had a wide audience, but he also worked in a variety of other media, including furniture, jewelry, and theatrical sets. He mostly worked in Vienna and Paris, but was also in Chicago, where he taught at the Art Institute, from 1904 to 1910. There, he introduced his interpretation of the "new art" to a United States audience. The densely patterned posters epitomize the Art Nouveau interest in natural forms, decoration, and a rejection of the anonymity of mechanical production.

Accomplishments Women were a common theme in Mucha's work (and in Art Nouveau art in general). The femme nouvelle or "new woman" type was a favorite subject, since it served both allegorical and decorative purposes. Indeed, Mucha and his peers celebrated femininity as the antidote to an overly-industrialized, impersonal, "masculine" world.Mucha worked in a variety of media that were accessible to a wide audience, and so the reach of his art extended beyond the borders of "high art." Everything could be a work of art, encompassing a person's daily experience, from wallpaper to furniture to clothing to promotional posters around the city.Although Mucha is most associated with his Art Nouveau posters, he spent the latter of half of his career focused on projects of a nationalist character. Stirred by a pride in his country and an interest in its artistic traditions, Mucha sought to celebrate the history and mores of Czech culture.

See more from Alphonse Mucha

View all artworks
Printmaking on Glass | 21.1x15.4 in
$541.05
Art Prints
Art Prints
Art Prints

Artmajeur

Receive our newsletter for art lovers and collectors