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Madame Réjane

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Madame Réjane

1897-1950

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Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Madame Réjane

1897-1950

Physical Qualities Crayon lithograph with scraping, Sheet: 507 x 326 mm. (19 15/16 x 12 13/16 in.) Image: 292 x 230 mm. (11 1/2 x 9 1/16 in.)
Credit Line Gift of M. Knoedler & Co., Inc.
Object Number 1959.135.10
This avant-garde female celebrities appeared on the stages, at the café-concerts, and in the nightclubs of late 19th-century Paris. Decadence, vulgarity, and cross-dressing were their performance hallmarks. Many emphasized their sexuality, whether straight or queer, to impress audiences. Marcelle Lender was a celebrated dancer who wore such extravagant makeup that a contemporary observer noted “that one no longer knows which is nose and which is eye; only flash of color, tulle, smile, shout, freedom…” Cha-UKao, whose stage name combined the words for the can-can dance (chahut) and “chaos,” was an acrobat, sex worker, and outspoken lesbian. Her clown costumes purposefully blurred the line between men and women’s clothing. The actress Gabrielle Réjane, celebrated for her suggestive wit and vulgar spontaneity, is shown jauntily dressed in traditional middleclass male clothing, including a top hat and cravat. Yvette Guilbert was known for wearing black gloves and low-cut gowns that exaggerated her lanky, flat-chested physique. She delighted audiences in cabarets and café-concerts with her unabashed flirting and raunchy lyrics.
Susan Dackerman, "Toulouse-Lautrec: Master of the Moulin Rouge," circulated to North Carolina Museum of Art, November 11, 2001-February 17, 2002; BMA, February 15 - May 23, 2004; Tampa Art Museum, November 3, 2003 - January 4, 2004; Muscarelle Museum of Art, College of William and Mary, August 28 - October 24, 2004.

BMA, "Toulouse Lautrec and His Contemporaries," 27 May - 17 August, 1986.

Jay Fisher, BMA, "Portraits in Prints," 19 October - 11 December, 1977.

Andaleeb Banta, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "Women Behaving Badly: 400 Years of Power and Protest," July 18 - December 19, 2021.

Inscribed: Artist's cipher l/l

Artist

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

1863–1900

French, 1864-1901
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Study for "L'Éventail de Madame Mallarmé" (refused etching)
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S. A. R. Madame la Dauphine
1833
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Jules Renard, and others
Histoires Naturelles
1898
Aimé de Lemud, Marie-Adélaide Ducluzeau, and others
Madame la Duchesse d'Orléans (Exposition de 1838) (Porcelaine d'après le pastel de Mr. Henriquet-Dupont), after Mme. Ad. Ducluzeau
1837
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, André Marty, and others
At the Ambassadeurs - Singer at the Café-Concert
1893
Henri Matisse and Roger Lacourière
Fan of Madame Mallarmé (published state)
1929–1930
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Carnaval - Au Moulin Rouge - Entrée de Cha-U-Kao
1895
Henri Matisse and Roger Lacourière
Fan of Madame Mallarmé (published state, cancelled with remarques)
1929–1930
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Yvette Guilbert Singing Linger-Longer-Loo
1890–1900