Vallotton, Félix
1865 – 1925
French, Swiss
Born in Switzerland to a modest, Protestant family, Félix Vallotton made his way to Paris to study art at the age of 16 and never left. He quickly earned a reputation as a very fine woodcut print maker notable for a simple but impactful, flat, black and white style that often satirized the bourgeoisie. He soon joined the semi-secret group “Les Nabis [Prophets]” earning the nickname “the foreign Nabi”.
His marriage to the wealthy widow Gabrielle Rodrigues-Henriques, sister of the owner of the venerable Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, brought him financial security and he temporarily abandoned print making for more prestigious oil painting. However, he returned to wood block printing during World War I when he created a portfolio as an homage to his adopted country.
As well as a successful painter and printmaker, Vallotton was also a novelist, a playwright, and a photographer. His voyeuristic, suspenseful style makes him one of the more enigmatic artists of the 20th century.
-

Vallotton, Félix
(1865 - 1925) French, Swiss$2,500.
“Le Gagnant (V&G 201)”, 1898
Woodcut printed in black on Japan paper
Edition of 100
This print was intended for Ambroise Vollard’s unpublished third “Album de Les Peintres-Graveurs”
8 ⅝" x 7"
Monogrammed and titled in block -

Vallotton, Félix
(1865 - 1925) French, Swiss$3,500.
“Le Chapeau vert (V&G 54)”, 1896
Lithograph printed in colors on Chine paper
Edition of 100
Published in "Études des femmes"
15" x 10 ½"
Monogrammed in stone
Signed in blue pencil in margin