Details
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (1864-1901)
Lender assise
lithograph, on wove paper, 1895, with the artist's lifetime orange-red monogram stamp (see Lugt 1338), numbered 'no 11/20' by the publisher, published by E. Kleinmann, Paris, with his blindstamp, the full sheet, in good condition, framed
Image: 14 x 958 in. (355 x 245 mm.)
Sheet: 2014 x 1534 in. (515 x 398 mm.)
Provenance
Franz Wilhelm Koenigs (1881-1941), Haarlem.
Acquired by the above circa 1900-1920 (according to the family); thence by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Delteil 163; Adhémar 132; Wittrock 102; Adriani 117
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Lot Essay

Marcelle Lender (1862-1926) was one of the most beloved stars of the opéra bouffe, a type of light opera that flourished in Paris from the mid-nineteenth century. Beginning in 1899, Lender performed regularly in the Théâtre des Variétés in Montmartre, where she specialized in roles featuring pantomime and dance. Lender first caught Lautrec’s attention in 1893, and his interest blossomed into an obsession when she stared in Chilpéric two years later. Lender’s performance of a Spanish-style bolero in the second act enchanted him, and it was reported that he attended twenty performances, sitting in the same seat, arriving just in time to see her dance. Unlike Avril or Guilbert, Lender never became a close friend. He depicted her numerous times in print and oil, including the masterpiece Marcelle Lender Dancing the Bolero (1895-96). Lautrec offered her the painting as a gift, but it was declined. Lender remarked to a friend that she thought Lautrec a ‘horrible man’, an opinion no doubt strengthened by one encounter where they were introduced at dinner after a performance, whereupon Lautrec sat down at her table uninvited and proceeded to eat off her plate.
[Adapted from Joanna Wendel, Toulouse-Lautrec and the Stars of Paris, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2019, pp. 65-7]
Wittrock calls for an edition of approximately thirty, of which he cites 19 impressions in public collections.

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