Artist: Marc Chagall (Russian-French, 1887-1985)
Title: "Cheval Bleu au Couple (Blue Horse with Couple)"
Portfolio: Derrière Le Miroir: Hommage à Aimé et Marguerite Maeght (No. 250)
*Unsigned edition
Year: 1982
Medium: Original Lithograph on smooth wove paper
Limited edition: Unknown, (there was also a signed and numbered edition of 50 on Arches paper with margins)
Printer: Atelier Mourlot, Paris, France
Publisher: Maeght Editeur, Paris, France
Reference: "Marc Chagall: The Lithographs - La Collection Sorlier" - Mourlot No. 993, page 371; Cramer No. 113
Sheet size: 15" x 11"
Condition: Minor edge wear upper right corner. In excellent condition
Very rare
Notes:
Produced for Chagall's collaboration with the August, 1982 No. 250 "Derrière Le Miroir: Hommage à Aimé et Marguerite Maeght" portfolio. Text on verso as issued.
In October 1945, the French art dealer Aimé Maeght opens his art gallery at 13 Rue de Téhéran in Paris. His beginning coincides with the end of Second World War and the return of a number of exiled artists back to France. The magazine Derriere Le Miroir was created in October 1946 and published without interruption until 1982. Maeght's ambition in establishing his print shop and his publication magazine Derriere Le Miroir was to make available to a broader audience less expensive printed imagery by the artists of his time, many whom were represented by his Paris gallery. Its original articles and illustrations (mainly original color lithographs by the gallery artists) were famous at the time.
The magazine covered only the artists exhibited by Maeght gallery either through personal or group exhibitions. Among them are (in alphabetical order): Henri-Georges Adam, Pierre Alechinsky, Bacon, Jean Bazaine, Georges Braque, Pol Bury, Alexander Calder, Marc Chagall, Roger Chastel, Eduardo Chillida, Alberto Giacometti, Vassily Kandinsky, Ellsworth Kelly, Fernand Léger, Lindner, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, Jacques Monory, Pablo Palazuelo, Paul Rebeyrolle, Jean-Paul Riopelle, Saul Steinberg, Pierre Tal-Coat, Antoni Tapies, Raoul Ubac, Bram van Velde.