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Brunelleschi, Umberto (1879-1949) - Manteau de Velours Broche 1914

Brunelleschi, Umberto (1879-1949) - Manteau de Velours Broche 1914

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This is an Art Deco image by Umberto Brunelleschi from Le Journal des Dames et des Modes 1914. It depicts a lady in a sumptuous brocade coat.

This download consists of 1 image, in jpeg format, that is 600dpi and 3816 pixels wide by 6376 pixels tall.

The picture is out of copyright and in the public domain, so you are free to use it in whatever way you'd like, including commercial use.

Umberto Brunelleschi (1879-1949) was an Italian artist. He was born in Montemurlo, Italy, studied at the Accademia delle Belle Arti in Florence and moved to Paris in 1900 with Ardengo Soffici where he soon established himself as a printer, book illustrator, set and costume designer.

He worked for Le Rire as a caricaturist (often under the pseudonym's Aroun-al-Raxid or Aron-al-Rascid) and was a contributor to many of the deluxe French fashion publications including Journal des Dames et Des Modes, La Vie Parisienne, Gazette du Bon Ton and Les Feuillets d'Art. Brunelleschi was also the artistic director of the short lived but significant La Guirlande d'art et de la littérature 1919-1920.

After serving in the Italian Army during the First World War, he returned to Paris. In the 1920s he diversified into set and costume designs for the Folies Bergère, the Casino de Paris, the Théâtre du Châtelet and theatres in New York City, Germany, and in his native country. In Italy, he worked for Opera Houses such as La Scala in Milan, and the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in Florence. He created costumes for Josephine Baker. He is also noted for his design of the logo for Martial et Armand, a Paris fashion house, around 1923.

His illustrated books include Voltaire (1933), Charles Perrault (Contes du temps jadis, 1912), Musset (La Nuit vénitienne), Goethe, Diderot (Les Bijoux indiscrets, etc.), Les Masques et les Prsonnages de la Comédie Italienne (1914), Phili ou Par delà le bien et le mal (1921), Le Radjah de Mazulipatam (1925), Le Malheureux Petit Voyage (1926) and Les Aventures du roi Pausole (1930).

Umberto Brunelleschi died 1949 in Paris.

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