Paul Berthon

Paul Berthon (Paul Louis Joseph Berthon, 15 March 1872 in Villefranche-sur-Saône - 27 february 1934 in Sceaux) was a French artist who produced primarily posters and lithographs.[1] Berthon's work is in the style of Art Nouveau, much like his contemporary Alphonse Mucha. Berthon studied as a painter in Villefranche-sur-Saône before moving to Paris. He later enrolled at the Ecole Normale d'Enseignement de Dessin and received lessons from Luc-Olivier Merson. His study of the decorative arts influenced his print making, influencing the strong lines and natural details that guided his art. The vast majority of Berthon's lithographed posters did not include advertisements and were meant to stand on their own.

Berthon's Art Nouveau-influenced poster for the revue L'ermitage, 1897

Further reading

  • Gérald Schurr: Les Petits Maîtres de la peinture 1820–1920 : Les Éditions de l’Amateur, t. IV, : Paris 1979.
  • Victor Arwas: Berthon & Grasset : Academy/Denoël: 1978, ISBN 978-0-856-70429-1.
gollark: Politicians should only be efficient when doing things I agree with.
gollark: Yes, me too.
gollark: Also less pointless ones like internal trading.
gollark: They can on relatively pointless matters like navigation satellites.
gollark: I mean, it has 26 or so countries in it, and if they couldn't in aggregate match the coolness of other countries what hope do they have?

References

  1. Haslam, Malcolm Marks & monograms: the decorative arts, 1880-1960 1995 p. 169, 345
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