A professional graphic designer who uses her background in art history and restoration to create everyday objects you can enjoy in your home or as wearable art. It's a joy to bring the best art and design of ages past into everyday life, plus invitations and DIY party projects. If you don't already share my love for artists and illustrators such as Alphonse Mucha, Edmund Dulac, Beatrix Potter, Carl Larsson and John Tenniel, perhaps you'll discover a new enthusiasm.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Verneuil Art Nouveau Butterflies Postcards



Verneuil Art Nouveau Butterflies Postcards from Zazzle.com

Nature-inspired butterfly and floral motif post cards cartes postales Postkarten

Nature-inspired butterfly and floral motifs with a sparing application of that wonderful Art Nouveau "spaghetti" – from La Belle Époque. Classy color scheme of cadmium orange, viridian (blue green) and chamoisee brown. I love the sense of movement and metamorphosis, and the wonderful garden feel.

Matching postage stamps, note cards, address labels and more are available in my gallery.

About the artist: Maurice Pillard-Verneuil studied under Art Nouveau master Eugene Grasset. An early interest in Japanese printmaking blossomed into a passion for Asian art after his visit to Southeast Asia. In love with nature and the natural world, he drew inspiration from plants, flowers, animals, insects and marine life.

About this artwork:This particular design is number 50 from a suite of 60 color lithographs after decorative Art Nouveau devices by Mucha, Verneuil and Auriol found in the book 'Combinaisons Ornementales se Multipliant à l'Infini à l'Aide du Miroir' (Decorative Combinations, Infinitely Multiplied with a Mirror) by George Auriol, pseudonym of Jean-Georges Huyot, journalist, poet, songwriter, painter and engraver. Published in the year 1900 by Librairie Centrale des Beaux Arts, Paris.

It has been carefully and lovingly prepared for print by a professional graphic artist using state-of-the-art software. It is a joy to bring the best art of previous centuries into our own for everyday use and enjoyment. I hope you will enjoy using this postcard as much as I enjoyed working on the design. It took me many hours, but it was, after all, a labor of love.

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