Alphonse Mucha

Alphonse Mucha's Self Portrait
Alphonse Mucha’s Self Portrait
Alphonse Mucha
Alphonse Mucha

Alphonse Maria Mucha was born in Ivancice on July 24, 1860. In 1877, Mucha was expelled from school because of his poor academic performance. On his way back home, he came across a Czech Baroque fresco painted by a local artist, Jan Umlauf (1825-1916), in a church. Mucha was incredibly taken by the work and then resolved to become an artist professionally.

At age 19, Mucha moves to Vienna to become an apprentice scenery painter at a theatre design company. While there, he also enrolls in evening art classes and goes to many galleries and art exhibitions. This changes in 1881, when a fire takes the lives of nearly 400 people as it destroys Vienna’s Ring Theatre. As a result, several of the theatre design company’s staff, including Mucha, loose their jobs.

In 1887, Mucha moves to Paris where his career later takes off. He spends several more years continuing his art education before finally becoming a professional illustrator.

Eight years after he moving to Paris, Alphonse Mucha signs a six year contract with Sarah Bernhardt after his Gismonda poster is featured on hoardings across the city. His contract makes him responsible for designing posters, stage sets and costumes for the leading actress of Paris.

Mucha's posters for Sarah Bernhardt
Mucha’s posters for Sarah Bernhardt

By 1896, Mucha’s Art Nouveau style takes flight, and his first The Seasons (series) is created. This leads to his first solo exhibition held ten years after he moved to Paris. 107 works of art are displayed in the show.

The Seasons (series) by Alphonse Mucha
The Seasons (series) by Alphonse Mucha

Later in life, Mucha branches out into other forms of art such as jewellery, but he is most known for his “Style Mucha” works such as his posters.

Snake bracelet designed by Mucha
Snake bracelet designed by Mucha

Mucha died 10 days before his 79th birthday due to illness and the deterioration of his health on July 14, 1939.

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Alphonse Mucha - Dance

austria-1899

job-v1

lorenzaccio-1896

1900 The Seasons 1

References:

http://www.muchafoundation.org/timeline

http://images.search.yahoo.com/

Art Nouveau at the Met

On Wednesday of our trip, our first stop was the Met Museum. It’s a huge museum, and would take you a very long time to look at everything.

Some history behind the Met Museum:
It is known as The Art Nouveau (
Maison de l’Art Nouveau), meaning house of art. It began as a movement started by a Czechoslovakian born printer, Alphonse Mucha, in 1895. Posters depicting large colorful floral motiffs were put out on the streets of Paris in an advertising campaign addressing the merits and beauty of natural living. The movement quickly spread to Glasgow via Munich and then to Moscow, as more lithographic posters were displayed across big name high street department stores like Fortnum & Masons, Fenwicks and Carneges.

The Art Nouveau exhibit is divided into three parts:
1. The 1900 World’s Fair in Paris, where Art Nouveau was established as the first new decorative style of the twentieth century
2. All the sources that influenced this beautiful style
3. Development of Art Nouveau, and how it came to blossom in major cities in Europe and North America.

The museum is not set up like this at all. I even asked a few of the guards there if they knew how to find it. They said that it’s not on the list, but they had some works that would be counted as Art Nouveau.

Here are some works by Louis Comfort Tiffany:

  

The fountain was my favorite. It was gigantic. Its colors and how the light hit it just made it glow.

If you can go to the Met museum, take a plenty of time to look at as much as possible.
If you don’t get lost in there for half an hour like I did, take your time to have a good glance at every thing. It will be worth it.