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Paul Gavarni - Ça C’est pas la perruque de Jules

Ça C’est pas la perruque de Jules (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1866 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer.
Paul Gavarni

Paul Gavarni was the nom de plume of Sulpice Guillaume Chevalier, a French illustrator, born in Paris.

Gavarni's father, Sulpice Chevalier, was from a family line of coopers from Burgundy. Paul began work as a mechanical worker in a machine factory but he saw that to make any progress in his profession, he had to be able to draw; accordingly in his spare time in the evenings, he took classes in drawing. He devoted his special attention to architectural and mechanical drawing and worked at land surveying and mapping which led to his obtaining a position with the Government Ordnance Department as a draughtsman. It wasn't until his early thirties that he turned his attention to his proper vocation as an artist.

His first published drawings were for the magazine Journal des modes.

At the time, Gavarni was barely thirty years of age. His sharp and witty drawings gave these generally commonplace and unartistic figures a life-likeness and an expression which soon won him a name in fashionable circles. He gradually gave greater attention to this more congenial work, and ultimately stopped working as an engineer to become the director of the journal Les Gens du monde.

Gavarni followed his interests, and began a series of lithographed sketches in which he portrayed the most striking characteristics, foibles and vices of the various classes of French society. The letterpress explanations attached to his drawings were short, but were forcible and humorous, if sometimes trivial, and were adapted to the particular subjects. At first he confined himself to the study of Parisian manners, more especially those of the Parisian youth.

Most of his best work appeared in Le Charivari. He had been invited by the editor François Caboche to draw for the magazine. Gavarni had never drawn caricatures and was reluctant to accept the request but was persuaded to submit some drawings for approval. This he did and they were accepted but he didn't care for the captions which had been added by the magazine editors. Thereafter, he started writing his own. This was the beginning of the Boites aux lettres series.

Some of his most scathing and most earnest pictures, the fruit of a visit to London, appeared in L'Illustration. He also illustrated Honoré de Balzac's novels, and Eugène Sue's Wandering Jew.

More Artworks by Paul Gavarni (View all 395 Artworks)

Allons bien Voilà que je descends pour ma provision de bois et que je ne prends pas de monnaie à présent

Allons bien Voilà que je descends pour ma provision de bois et que je ne prends pas de monnaie à présent

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Ma bonne bisque, va M’man, de se lever comme ça de bonne heure. mais il était joliment sucré le café

Ma bonne bisque, va M’man, de se lever comme ça de bonne heure. mais il était joliment sucré le café (1838-1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Pastourelle

Pastourelle

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
After nature; Nice turn

After nature; Nice turn (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Qu’est-ce que t’as mon vieux Auguste

Qu’est-ce que t’as mon vieux Auguste (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Comment, chéri, je ne saurai pas où j’ai fourré ma capote grise

Comment, chéri, je ne saurai pas où j’ai fourré ma capote grise

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Cette madame de Lieusaint est-elle bête puisque je suis Charles Dubourg et que tu es mon papa, tu ne pourrais pas t’a

Cette madame de Lieusaint est-elle bête puisque je suis Charles Dubourg et que tu es mon papa, tu ne pourrais pas t’a (1838-1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Clara et ses amants

Clara et ses amants (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Y en-a-ti des femmes, y’en a-ti. et quand on pense que tout ça mange

Y en-a-ti des femmes, y’en a-ti. et quand on pense que tout ça mange (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Oreste et Pylade seraient volontiers morts l’un pour l’autre, mais ils seraient brouillés s’ils n’avaient eu qu’une cu

Oreste et Pylade seraient volontiers morts l’un pour l’autre, mais ils seraient brouillés s’ils n’avaient eu qu’une cu (1839-1841)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Two men in conversation

Two men in conversation (1814-1866)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Monsieur n’est-ce pas que ça n’est pas vrai, que vous n’avez pas les cheveux peints

Monsieur n’est-ce pas que ça n’est pas vrai, que vous n’avez pas les cheveux peints (1838-1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Quand Maman aime bien petit Papa, elle appelle petit Papa, ma niniche

Quand Maman aime bien petit Papa, elle appelle petit Papa, ma niniche (1838-1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Masks and faces; What is done in the best society. To you the band, to me the sales pitch

Masks and faces; What is done in the best society. To you the band, to me the sales pitch

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
Voyons Coquardin, que diable il faut se faire une raison. Hum

Voyons Coquardin, que diable il faut se faire une raison. Hum (1840)

Paul Gavarni (French, 1804-1866)
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