C1915

The Golf Girl

Superb image by Louis Icart who captured the Art Deco period in his images of women.

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S/N: SP-GOLF-1915-TG-0522–194280
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Details

Full Title:

The Golf Girl

Date:

C1915

Condition:

Technique:

AUTHENTICITY
The Golf Girl - Antique Print from 1915

Genuine antique
dated:

1915

Description:

Superb image by Louis Icart who captured the Art Deco period in his images of women.

Louis Icart (1888 - 1950)

Louis Icart (1888-1950) French painter, graphic artist, and printmaker. His aunt, who was impressed by his talent during a visit, brought him to Paris in 1907, where he dedicated himself to painting, drawing and the production of numerous etchings. In the studio, where he initially produced frivolous postcards with copies of existing images, he soon designed his own works. Thereupon he received orders for the design of title pages for the magazine La Critique Théâtrale. Fashion houses hired Icart to create fashion sketches, with which he soon became known. In 1913 he showed his pictures at the Salon des Humoristes. Icart then learned the technique of copperplate engraving and from then on worked with this process. He was now working for the large French design studios and illustrated their catalogs. In 1914 he met the eighteen-year-old "beautiful blonde" Fanny Volmers, an employee of the Paquin fashion house, whom he married and who was the model for many of his works. Icart participated in the First World War as a fighter pilot. During this time he made countless sketches and etchings with patriotic themes. On his return, he made prints of his work, mostly using aquatint and drypoint etching.  In 1922, Louis Icart traveled with Fanny to New York City for his first American exhibition, which was first shown in the Belmaison gallery in John Wanamaker's department store and later moved to Wanamakers in Philadelphia.  In the late 1920s, Icart was very successful both artistically and financially with his publications and his work for large fashion and design studios.  Icart depicted life in Paris and New York in the 1920s and 1930s in his own style of painting. Success in 1930 enabled him to buy a magnificent house on the Montmartre hill in the north of Paris.  Icart died in his Parisian house in 1950.

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