HARRY ELIOT. MANCHESTER - GLASLOW

HARRY ELIOT. MANCHESTER - GLASLOW

68,16 £
Impuestos incluidos

Detalles del producto

GR-408

Ficha de datos

Año
C. 1910
Altura
37
Ancho
28
Pais
Reino Unido - United Kingdom - Royaume Uni
Técnica
Pochoir
Autor
ELIOTT HARRY (born Charles Edmond Hermet) (Paris 1882 - Villez-sous-Bailleul 1959)

Descripción

Harry Eliott, born Charles Edmond Hermet (Paris, 14 June 1882 - Villez-sous-Bailleul, 29 May 1959), was a French painter and illustrator.

Eliott was the son of a lithographer. An Anglophile, he took up an English pseudonym at an early age and tried to pass for an Englishman.

He was called up for the army in 1914, and married a young woman from Normandy in 1915, where he settled in 1917 after treatment for depression. The couple also lived in England for a while.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, he made a living doing illustrations for Nos loisirsMon journalLe Sourire, and la Revue Illustrée. As an artist he is best known for his humorous stenciled prints, and hunting scenes in the Victorian style of Randolph Caldecott and above all Cecil Aldin, illustrator for Charles Dickens. He was one of a number of French Dickens illustrators active in the 1930s.[1]

He also illustrated youth novels, most notable those published by Hachette for their Bibliothèque verte collection, which published well-known novels such as David Copperfield and White Fang. From 1923 to 1940 he drew cover illustrations for Le Chasseur français, an important publication for hunters, and for the catalogs of Manufrance, a mail order company.