Recommended Frames
Custom Frames
Canvas
Wood Mount
Laminate
Frame
High-quality printing gives this fine art print its vivid and sharp appearance. Produced on medium weight cover stock, this art reproduction is coated with a silken finish that protects the inks and creates an elegant look. The versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
High-quality printing gives this fine art print its vivid and sharp appearance. Produced on medium weight cover stock, this art reproduction is coated with a silken finish that protects the inks and creates an elegant look. The versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Theophile Alexandre Steinlen (1859 – 1923) was a Swiss artist whose posters of cabarets and music hall performers were infused with a warm, intimate style. Initially employed as a textile printer, Steinlen became immersed in the avant-garde world of the Chat Noir Café after moving to Paris’ bohemian Montmartre section. In Paris, he created over 400 Art Nouveau illustrations for local magazines, as well as advertisements and stylized nightclub posters, which often featured the cats that he loved. Steinlen also drew genre scenes of the working class, which depicted everyday Parisian life in a style that was technically proficient and also exhibited great sensitivity toward his subjects.
Read MoreA mischievous black cat casts his spell on revelers who carouse at the cabaret advertised in Theophile Alexandre Steinlen’s “Chat Noir.” Steinlen (1859 – 1923), originally a textile designer before becoming a prolific illustrator, he became famous for posters of music hall performers and cabarets, which often featured his trademark cats. The Chat Noir was a bohemian Montmartre nightclub which published its own journal illustrated by Steinlen.
High-quality printing gives this fine art print its vivid and sharp appearance. Produced on medium weight cover stock, this art reproduction is coated with a silken finish that protects the inks and creates an elegant look. The versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Theophile Alexandre Steinlen (1859 – 1923) was a Swiss artist whose posters of cabarets and music hall performers were infused with a warm, intimate style. Initially employed as a textile printer, Steinlen became immersed in the avant-garde world of the Chat Noir Café after moving to Paris’ bohemian Montmartre section. In Paris, he created over 400 Art Nouveau illustrations for local magazines, as well as advertisements and stylized nightclub posters, which often featured the cats that he loved. Steinlen also drew genre scenes of the working class, which depicted everyday Parisian life in a style that was technically proficient and also exhibited great sensitivity toward his subjects.
Read MoreA mischievous black cat casts his spell on revelers who carouse at the cabaret advertised in Theophile Alexandre Steinlen’s “Chat Noir.” Steinlen (1859 – 1923), originally a textile designer before becoming a prolific illustrator, he became famous for posters of music hall performers and cabarets, which often featured his trademark cats. The Chat Noir was a bohemian Montmartre nightclub which published its own journal illustrated by Steinlen.