Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970
Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970

Marc Chagall: The Magician of Paris - 1970

This full-color exhibition poster by Marc Chagall was created in 1970 for his major retrospective at the Grand Palais in Paris. It combines Chagall's poetic imagery with the lightness of a graphic manifesto, conveying the magic of his art in a direct way. As an original historical poster, it possesses significant historical importance and lasting collector value.

€750 Regular price
Unit price per
Tax included.
  •   Original artwork
  •   Authenticity verified
  •   Return policy

artist

Marc Chagall

Workshop:Charles Sorlier

Studio:Mourlot Frères (Fernand Mourlot & Maurice Mourlot)

Editor:National Museums

Technology & Printing Processes

Lithography - Color lithography

Details

Year:1970

Size in cm:55.5 x 39 image
Size in cm:71 x 51 sheets

Location:
Paris

Condition
: good

Special features

Reference:Sorlier ( 1976 ) p. 128 f.

Edition:3,500 copies

Authenticity & Guarantee

We guarantee the authenticity of this original print. The work is delivered with a written certificate of authenticity. All information regarding technique, date of creation, and provenance has been carefully verified.

Do you have a question?

  • Call us on 030 - 20165666
  • Write us an email: kontakt@antiquariatgaston.de

Shipping & Returns

Jedes Kunstwerk wird von uns sorgfältig geprüft, dokumentiert und individuell verpackt.

Der Versand erfolgt – abhängig von Größe und Beschaffenheit – per Paketdienst oder über spezialisierte Kunstlogistik.

Bitte beachten Sie, dass es sich bei unseren Arbeiten um originale Kunstwerke handelt. Rückgaben sind daher nicht aufgrund persönlicher Geschmacksentscheidungen möglich.

Sollte ein Werk jedoch beschädigt ankommen oder erheblich von der Beschreibung abweichen, bitten wir um umgehende Kontaktaufnahme, damit wir gemeinsam eine Lösung finden können.

Information about the work

Image description

Against a softly glazed, light blue background, a floating scene unfolds. On the right stands a female figure, elegant and serene, holding a bouquet of flowers, her body traversed by vibrant patches of color. On the left, smaller figures are grouped, seemingly dancing weightlessly in space or turning towards one another. Below, a Parisian cityscape opens up, with bridges, towers, and flowing lines that are suggested rather than sharply defined. The colors appear transparent and light, blue dominating, complemented by bold accents of red, green, and yellow. Everything seems to be in motion, as if the image is slowly unfolding before the viewer.

Artistic context

Marc Chagall's art is characterized by a distinctive, poetic visual language: floating figures, luminous colors, and a dreamlike logic in which love, music, circus, and spirituality become recurring symbols. His motifs evoke memories that need no explanation—they unfold their effect directly and emotionally.

Chagall's original prints, in particular, are considered independent works within his oeuvre. In collaboration with renowned printmaking workshops, he created lithographs of exceptional painterly quality that impressively translate his distinctive style in color and line. These prints are attractive to collectors because they make Chagall's visual world accessible in an authentic, documented form – and at the same time, they are among the most sought-after works of Classical Modernism.

Marc Chagall

Marc Chagall (1887–1985) is considered one of the most important and poetic artists of the modern era. His work defies clear art historical categorization, blending influences from Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, and Surrealism with a profoundly personal, symbolic visual language. Born Moishe Shagal in Vitebsk, Belarus, he grew up in an Orthodox Jewish family. The impressions of his childhood—village life, religious rituals, music, festivals, and folk tales—profoundly shaped his art and became a recurring source of inspiration for his visual world. In Chagall's works, figures float through space, lovers defy gravity, animals make music, and reality merges with dreams and memories.

In 1910, Chagall moved to Paris, where he came into contact with the artistic avant-garde. Despite the formative influences of this period, he always remained true to his narrative approach. His paintings tell stories of love, home, loss, hope, and spirituality. His great love, Bella Rosenfeld, played a central role in his work; she appears in many pieces as a luminous, floating figure and became a symbol of emotional connection. Among the most important motifs in his oeuvre are lovers, circus scenes, religious and biblical themes, as well as animals and musicians. The circus, in particular, fascinated Chagall as a poetic metaphor for human life—a place of wonder, joy, but also vulnerability.

During World War II, Chagall emigrated to the USA, where experiences of exile, uprooting, and loss were increasingly reflected in his work. After returning to Europe, he settled in southern France and expanded his artistic output to include stained glass windows, mosaics, ceramics, and monumental murals and ceiling paintings, including important works for the Paris Opera, Metz Cathedral, and international public buildings. Even in his later work, his art remained characterized by intense color, poetry, and a profound humanity.

Marc Chagall understood art not as a purely intellectual experiment, but as an emotional experience and an expression of inner truths. His works are both profoundly personal and universally accessible, speaking directly to viewers even today. With his unmistakable visual language, Chagall created a timeless oeuvre that celebrates imagination, memory, and love as central forces of human existence, making him one of the most enduringly influential artists of the 20th century.