The artist-designer
Jules Chéret (1835–1932) was a notable early creator of French Art Nouveau posters. He helped turn the advertising poster into an art form. The son a family of artisans, he apprenticed with a lithographer and also studied at the
École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs. Finding little work in Paris, he went to London, and designed furniture for a time, but then returned to Paris and had a great success in 1858 with a poster for
Orpheus in the Underworld by
Jacques Offenbach. He still struggled, and returned to London to design brochures. His breakthrough came in 1866 when a French perfume and toiletries maker, Eugene Rimmel, commissioned him to make advertising posters for his products. Rimmel funded Chéret to open the first color lithography shop in Paris. He experimented with different techniques and materials, first working in two colors, then 1869 advancing to three colors, black, red and combination color. He produced a wide variety of very popular posters, depicting idealized contemporary women, in posters for cosmetics and then for theater performances and ice skating rinks, including a famous poster for the Palais de Glace ice-skating rink in Paris (1896). Divan Japonais LACMA 59.80.19.jpg|
Divan Japonais lithograph by
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1892–93) Cheret, Jules - La Loie Fuller (pl 73).jpg|Poster for the dancer
Loie Fuller by
Jules Chéret (1893) Folies Bergère, Fleur de Lotus, 1893, by Jules Chéret.jpg|Folies Bergère, Fleur de Lotus, by
Jules Chéret (1893) Eugene Grasset, poster for Grafton Galleries, 1893.jpg|Poster for Grafton Galleries by
Eugène Grasset (1893) File:PP D079 poster by grasset for l'encre marquet.jpg|Poster by Eugène Grasset for Marquet Ink (1894) The Swiss-French artist
Eugène Grasset (1845–1917) was another early creator of French Art Nouveau posters. He moved to Paris in 1871 and began designing ceramics, jewelry, furniture and tapestries. He gradually moved toward the graphic arts, and did an exceptional series of book illustrations and advertising posters. He helped decorate the famous cabaret
Le Chat noir in 1885 and made his first posters for the
Fêtes de Paris. He made a celebrated poster of
Sarah Bernhardt in 1890, and a wide variety of book illustrations.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864–1901) was also a major figure in the early style. He began working together with two of the
Les Nabis painters,
Pierre Bonnard and
Édouard Vuillard, who turned him toward illustration. His Art Nouveau career was brief; he died at the age of 36 in 1901.
Alphonse Mucha (1860–1939), born in
Moravia in what is now the
Czech Republic, trained as a painter in Munich for two years and then moved to Paris in 1887, where he struggled to survive. His moment came in December 1894, when he was asked, on very short notice, to create a poster for a new play,
Gismonda, starring
Sarah Bernhardt. His poster, a full-length portrait of Bernardt in costume against a background of Byzantine mosaic and sinuous lettering, became an immediate classic of Art Nouveau. Bernhardt signed him to a five-year contract, and, with each successive play and poster, his fame increased. Bernardt herself set aside a number of each new poster to sell them to collectors. Mucha was asked to produce posters for a variety of clients, from travel resorts to winemakers. The female figure were always highly stylized, and embellished with floral decoration and curling
whiplash lines or The backgrounds were two-dimensional, filled with ornament but no depth. Mucha himself rejected the term
Art Nouveau for his work, saying that "art cannot be new". He moved to Prague in 1910 to pursue more serious historical painting, a cycle of large-scale works called The
Slav Epic. File:Alphonse Mucha - Poster for Victorien Sardou's Gismonda starring Sarah Bernhardt.jpg|
Gismonda (1894) Alfons Mucha - 1896 - Biscuits Lefèvre-Utile.jpg|
Biscuits Lefèvre-Utile (1896) Alphonse Mucha - Zodiac.jpg|Zodiac Calendar (1896) File:Alfons Mucha - 1902 - Cycles Perfecta.jpg|Poster for Perfect Bicycles (1902)
Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen (1859–1923) was another important early Art Nouveau figure, whose work focused more on ordinary people and life in Montmartre, and political causes; besides making posters for cabarets, he illustrated socialist and anarchist publications. He made a famous poster for a cabaret called
Le Chat Noir in 1896, with typical Art Nouveau curved lines and asymmetric print. Curling cat tails featured in several of his works. Based on the success of his theater posters, Mucha made posters for a variety of products, ranging from cigarettes and soap to beer biscuits, all featuring an idealized female figure with an hourglass figure. He went on to design products, from jewellery to biscuit boxes, in his distinctive style.
Paul Berthon (1872–1909) was a notable figure of the later French Art Nouveau. A student of
Eugène Grasset, he helped develop
chromolithography, a more refined version of lithography which gave more accurate colors as well as the possibility of highlighting some colors over others. He specialized in portraits of women, either portraying them as idealized figures, taken from the style of the
Pre-Raphaelites, as in the illustration for the cover of ''L'Hermitage'', or as seducers, as in his poster for the
Folies Bergere, depicting the dancer and courtesan
Liane de Pougy luring men into a spider's web. File:Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen - Tournée du Chat Noir de Rodolphe Salis (Tour of Rodolphe Salis' Chat Noir) - Google Art Project.jpg|Poster for the Chat Noir cabaret by
Théophile Steinlen (1896) Steinlen-Motocycles Comiot.jpg|
Motocycles Comiot by
Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen File:Compagnie Française des Chocolats et des Thès MET DT270090.jpg|Poster by
Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen (1895) File:Sainte-Marie-des-Fleurs par Paul Berthon.jpeg|
Sainte-Marie-des-Fleurs by
Paul Berthon (1897) File:L'Ermitage par Paul Berthon 2.jpg|Poster for ''L'Ermitage'' Review, by
Paul Berthon (1897) File:Liane de Pougy by Paul Berthon.jpg|Poster for dancer
Liane de Pougy at the
Folies Bergere,
Paul Berthon (1890s)
Manuel Orazi (1860–1934) was born in Rome, but came to work in Paris in 1892 as an illustrator for novels and magazines. In 1895 he made a series of
symbolist illustrations, called
The Magic Calendar. His best known Art Nouveau work is the poster for
La Maison Moderne, a shop of Art Nouveau interior design which competed with that of
Samuel Bing, which combined a dozen aspects of Art Nouveau into a single illustration. Orazi also made illustrations of
Sarah Bernhardt, including a poster of her as the Byzantine Empress Theodora, surrounded by mosaic patterns. ==Belgium==