After the war, Chimot rented
Renoir’s studio in the
Boulevard de Rochechouart. He already had the etchings for
Les Après-midi de Montmartre. These were published in 1919, followed by
La Montée aux enfers and
Les Soirs d’opium by
Maurice Magre,
Le Fou by
Aurele Partorni,
L’Enfer by
Henri Barbusse,
La Petite Jeanne pâle by
Jean de Tinan, and
Mouki le Delaisse by
André Cuel, all illustrated with original etchings between 1920 and 1922. In 1921 Chimot also founded a magazine,
La Roseraie: Revue des Arts et des Lettres, published by the printer and publisher La Roseraie under Chimot's artistic direction. This however ceased production after a single issue.
Devambez This led to the breakthrough in Chimot's career by which he became artistic director of
Les Éditions d’Art Devambez. Between 1923 and 1931, from his atelier in the rue Ampère, he oversaw the production of an array of books illustrated by such artists as
Pierre Brissaud,
Edgar Chahine,
Alméry Lobel-Riche, and
Tsuguharu Foujita. He reserved some choice texts for himself, including
Les Chansons de Bilitis by
Pierre Louÿs (1925),
Les Belles de nuit by Magre (1927), and
Parallèlement by
Paul Verlaine (1931). The crucial decade of his career was that between the end of
World War I and the
Wall Street crash. It was during this time of frivolity and excess that Chimot created the haunting and compelling images by which his name will endure. Not only was he editing an important list for Devambez, but he remained at the same time as director of
Éditions de La Roseraie, while also pursuing his own artistic career. In the 1920s, Chimot also made at least two films, L’Ornière (1924, also known as
Micheline Horn and as
Sur le Chemin de Vrai) and
Survivre (date unknown). During the glittering Jazz Age, Chimot was forming not just artistic but literary alliances, with writers such as the
Surrealist Gilbert Lély, who dedicated the first publication of
Ne tue ton père qu’à bon escient to Chimot in 1929. On 23 October of that year, Édouard Chimot must have felt gloriously launched on his late-started career. At the age of 49, he was a significant figure in the Paris art world, a generous patron of his fellow artists, and himself an artist with a public hungry for his late-
Symbolist nudes, "soumises à leurs passions mortelles et délicieuses", as André Warnod put it. The following day came the Wall Street Crash, which wiped out the market for fancy limited editions. When the last of the books in production for Devambez, Chimot's own edition of
Parallèlement, was published in 1931, the game was up. That year a monograph on Chimot by Maurice Rat was published, with a preface by
Maurice Magre, in the series
Les Artistes du livre, putting the full stop to the glory years of Chimot. == Later career ==