Collection
Paul Gavarni
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
-
Lit .. tle flower ... of the fields / Always ... always ... hidden, p. 23 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Gin, from 'Les Anglais chez eux' - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
The Temptation of a Saint Antoinette - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Masques et Visages [Masks and Faces] - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Carrots! How many are there, of the Bourgeois and the Crested Birds that live only on them? - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
"... Yes my dear [meat (lit.)] Auguste. I am decidedly arrested in the heart so much that my rascal of a director will have half left it..., p. 41" - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
The Ex-Goddess of Liberty - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Ah! Believe if you would that the man who made me a dreamer could pride himself on being a scoundrel., p. 111 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
The Madame of the tent puts on her stockings! More than that, the legs! - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Some say that your Monsieur, Monsieur Polyte, wants, despite the respect he owes you, to eat his estate in [truffes] truffles ... You mean in [turf] the racetrack, old man Pigaud. - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
I have to say that those little bootlettes there would have kept company with no small number of boots! - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Well, my dear, at the next carnival, I gave a son to him, to that animal. And so? And so he didn't want it!, p. 133 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
And if Mlle. would condescend to accept the homage and supplication of a gentleman... -Are you finished yet?!, p. 61 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Misery and Her Children - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Do you know that charming person? Perfectly: she is the wife of two of my friends. - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Ah, that! Come on, M. le baron, what the devil would you wish that one did with your confidences, if not abuse them? - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Strong in Dominoes - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
My dear: men, what a farce! It's always the same story: a woman has only herself. Crazy! Crazy! - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
"Platonic love" is just an affectation, p. 131 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
I am like that character of Henri Monnier who doesn't like spinach. I don't like the piano, and I am happy about that because if I did like the piano, my wife would play the hunting-horn. - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Come on! Madame Highness, just between us does Monsieur respect himself so much that he wouldn't give Madame a blow? - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Here is a lot of money for Your Honor, Milord. Here is a lot of honor for your money, Sire. - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price -
Toinon! I'm not worth anything when one harasses me: I know my mind! What a damned knowledge you have there!, p. 17 - Paul Gavarni
Print
Regular price From $29.00 USDSale price From $29.00 USD Regular price
Artist Biography
Paul Gavarni
Gavarni was imprisoned for debt in 1835 after his magazine, the Journal of High Society, failed after eighteen issues. He served nearly a year. The experience did not prevent him from becoming the most stylish caricaturist in Paris, but it may explain the darkness that crept into his later work.
His real name was Sulpice Guillaume Chevalier. He adopted "Gavarni" from the town of Gavarnie in the Pyrenees after a journey there. He was born in Paris in 1804, worked as a machinist in a factory, and taught himself to draw in evening classes. By the 1830s he was the leading illustrator of Parisian social life: fashionable women, carnival scenes, lorettes and debardeurs, all rendered with a wit and polish that Balzac praised publicly and that helped establish Gavarni's reputation.
After the deaths of his mother and the collapse of his marriage around 1845, his style shifted. He spent time in London documenting the lives of the poor, producing work that was bleaker and more compassionate than his Paris satire. His catalogue raisonne lists approximately eight thousand works. He is often compared with his contemporary Daumier, though Gavarni's satire was more polished and less political. He died in Paris in 1866.
His real name was Sulpice Guillaume Chevalier. He adopted "Gavarni" from the town of Gavarnie in the Pyrenees after a journey there. He was born in Paris in 1804, worked as a machinist in a factory, and taught himself to draw in evening classes. By the 1830s he was the leading illustrator of Parisian social life: fashionable women, carnival scenes, lorettes and debardeurs, all rendered with a wit and polish that Balzac praised publicly and that helped establish Gavarni's reputation.
After the deaths of his mother and the collapse of his marriage around 1845, his style shifted. He spent time in London documenting the lives of the poor, producing work that was bleaker and more compassionate than his Paris satire. His catalogue raisonne lists approximately eight thousand works. He is often compared with his contemporary Daumier, though Gavarni's satire was more polished and less political. He died in Paris in 1866.
Why Choose Us ?







