Access Denied
Access Denied

The site owner may have set restrictions that prevent you from accessing the site. Please contact the site owner for access.

Protected by 
MIDA Logo  MIDA

It’s Getting Hot: 26% Off with STARTTHESUMMER

Cart 0

Sorry, looks like we don't have enough of this product.

Pair with
Add order notes
Subtotal Free
Shipping, taxes, and discount codes are calculated at checkout

Brianchon, Maurice

MAURICE BRIANCHON Saint-Jean-de-Luz, La Plage, 1964

Hurry, Only 1 Left!
Regular price $250
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Lithograph titled Saint-Jean-de-Luz, la Plage by Maurice Brianchon from the landmark volume Prints from the Mourlot Press, published in Paris in 1964 in a first edition of 2,000 copies. Printed by the legendary Mourlot Press, the book celebrated one of the most important lithographic workshops of the twentieth century.

This colorful seaside composition captures the atmosphere of the Basque coastal town of Saint-Jean-de-Luz through Brianchon’s elegant balance of abstraction and figuration. Rich blues, reds, and textured forms evoke beachgoers gathered along the shore, reflecting the artist’s refined decorative sensibility and lyrical approach to modern French painting.

The publication also included original lithographs and plates by major twentieth-century masters including Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, Joan Miró, Henri Matisse, Alexander Calder, Georges Braque, and others, making the volume an important reference in the history of modern lithography.

Produced during the pre-digital printmaking era, this lithograph retains the rich tonal surface and painterly quality associated with traditional Mourlot studio printing. Framing available upon request.

Details

Sku: XX2850

Artist: Maurice Brianchon

Title: Saint-Jean-de-Luz, La Plage

Year: 1964

Signed: No

Medium: Lithograph

Edition Size: 2000

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 10 x 7.5 inches ( 25 x 19 cm )

Image Size: 10 x 7.5 inches ( 25 x 19 cm )

MAURICE BRIANCHON Saint-Jean-de-Luz, La Plage, 1964

$250

About the Artist

Maurice Brianchon

Maurice Brianchon (1899-1979) was a French painter born in Fresnay-sur-Sarthe, France. In 1917, Maurice Brianchon between the Ecole nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts of Paris in Fernand Cormon workshop and in 1918 left this school to follow at the National School of Decorative Arts courses Eugene Island Morand (1853-1930) 2 who taught there since 1908. There he met Roland Oudot, Raymond Legueult, Joseph Inguimberty, François Desnoyers, Jacques Adnet and Kostya Terechkovitch. He exhibited for the first time at the Salon d'Automne in 1919. A trip to Belgium and the Netherlands introduced him to the Flemish and Dutch painters through the museums he visited Brussels, Antwerp, Bruges and Amsterdam. This is the time he rereads the Masters of Eugene Fromentin once. He left the decorative arts. In 1922 he became a member of the Salon d'Automne of the committee and takes with his friend Raymond Legueult a Maine Avenue studio in Paris. Jacques Rouche, director of the Paris Opera asked him to create the costumes for the ballet Griselidis which will premiere on November 29, 1922. In 1924, he received the Blumenthal prize and a scholarship to the School of Decorative Arts that allow it to do, in the company of Legueult, a trip to Spain where they discover in the Prado museum masters of Spanish painting as they admire and they make copies: Diego Velazquez, Goya, El Greco.
×

Please wait...

Make an Offer

Descriptive image text
Descriptive image text