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ALPHONSE MUCHA (1860-1939)

86

BÉNÉDICTINS DE SOULAC. Circa 1896.

14

1

/

2

x11

1

/

2

inches, 36

3

/

4

x29

1

/

4

cm. F. Champenois, Paris.

Condition B / B-: expertly-recreated text panel; creases, restoration and overpainting in image; minor

smudging and discoloration in margins and image; metal grommets in top margin. Printed on card. Matted

and framed. Unexamined out of frame.

“The most elusive of all Mucha posters” (Rennert / Weill p. 66). Until the mid-1980s, this poster was

“known to us only from a single reproduction in the pages of

La Plume

magazine and from a listing

in the Salon des Cent exhibition of 1897” (ibid). When the Moravian Galerie held their big exhibition

of Mucha’s works in Brno in 1979, this poster was represented in the catalogue without any dimensions

or description of its colors with the caption: “This poster exists only as a period reproduction.”

Advertising dental hygiene products, the image depicts a monk consulting an ancient botanical book,

clearly scouring its pages for important ingredients for their toothpastes. The image reproduced in

La

Plume

shows the blank space at the bottom right as being an intricately carved piece of wood - either

the side of the chair the monk is sitting in or the door to a cabinet. Here, that area has been cut out

and replaced with a blank piece of paper. This is the

FIRST TIME THIS POSTER HAS APPEARED AT AUCTION

and only the second copy we have been able to locate, the other being part of the Ivan Lendl

Collection. This copy is the only one to have the grommets intact at top. The copy in the Lendl

collection has the same missing area in the lower right part of the image. The question remains as to

why

La Plume

saw fit to illustrate this atypical poster of Mucha’s in the first place.

RARE

. Rennert /

Weill 9, Brno 18, Mucha / Henderson 118, Mucha / Bridges A32, Jiri Mucha p. 85, Lendl p. 108.

[1,500/2,000]