Jules Grandjoan
"Isadora Duncan".
Waxes on paper.
Work intervened on both sides.
Measurements: 44 x 29 cm; 60 x 50 cm (frame).
Open live auction

BID HISTORY
DESCRIPTION
JULES GRANDJOAN (Nantes, 1875-1968).
"Isadora Duncan".
Waxes on paper.
Work intervened on both sides.
Measurements: 44 x 29 cm; 60 x 50 cm (frame).
One of the most singular aspects of Jules Grandjoan's artistic career was his fascination for the figure of the dancer Isadora Duncan, whom he met in 1903 during a performance at the Sarah-Bernhardt Theater in Paris, where she was interpreting pieces by Chopin. That experience deeply marked Grandjouan, who was not only captivated by the innovative expressiveness of Duncan's movement, but also formed a lasting friendship with her. The fruit of this admiration were numerous drawings dedicated to the artist, in which he captured her dance with sensitivity and expressive vigor. The Museum of Nantes has a collection of fifty of these works, closely linked to the piece referred to here, which stand out both for their lyricism and for their fidelity to the gesture and emotional energy of the dancer.
Jules Grandjouan was a leading figure in the field of French graphic art in the early twentieth century, both for his plastic work and for his political commitment. Coming from a bourgeois family, his father, Julien Grandjouan, belonged to a wealthy environment linked to the local industry. The family was also related to the artist Jean Émile Laboureur. Despite having studied law and having started as a notary's assistant in 1897, it was finally drawing that prevailed as the dominant vocation in his life.
From 1900, after moving to Paris, Grandjouan became one of the pioneers of political and social poster art, giving graphic form to his revolutionary syndicalist ideas. His work was widely disseminated through emblematic publications such as L'Assiette au beurre, where he collaborated actively between 1901 and 1912, especially with Václav Hradecký. In his illustrations he insistently addressed themes such as anti-militarism, anti-patriotism and anti-clericalism, reflecting a profound criticism of the dominant structures of the society of his time.
In addition to his work for the press, Grandjouan devoted part of his graphic production to illustrating the working conditions of workers, as evidenced by his collaboration with La Voix des verriers, the communication organ of the glass and ceramics workers affiliated to the CGT. His work, therefore, is not only a testimony of a singular aesthetic sensibility, but also a powerful tool for denouncing and raising social awareness. Jules Grandjouan thus represents a key figure in the confluence of art, politics and activism in early 20th century France.
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