-
Louis Icart illustration Waltz Echos, Resonance.
Waltz Echos, Resonance by Louis Icart is a hand-colored etching from the late 1920s–1930s that presents a reclining, fashionably dressed woman holding a violin and bow. Draped in a flowing black gown with a pale fur...Regular price From $23.61 -
Louis Icart Love's Awakening, La Pomme
“Love’s Awakening (La Pomme)” by Louis Icart is a hand-colored etching from the 1920s that depicts a reclining nude woman stretched across a fur-covered bed, loosely holding an apple near her lips. Several apples rest nearby,...Regular price From $23.42 -
Louis Icart Fair Dancer
Fair Dancer, created during the 1920s–1930s, is a delicate etching with aquatint that captures a graceful female ballerina dancer . The figure is rendered with flowing lines and soft tonal shading, emphasizing movement, lightness, and elegance....Regular price From $49.70 -
Louis Icart illustration "Les Baigneuses" ( The Bathers )
“Les Baigneuses” (The Bathers) by Louis Icart is an elegant early 20th-century illustration, typically created in the 1920s–1930s during the height of the Art Deco period. Executed as a hand-colored etching, the work depicts graceful, sensuous...Regular price From $23.42 -
Louis Icart vintage illustration Thaïs Lady with Leopards
Thaïs (Lady with Leopards)” by Louis Icart is a hand-colored etching created in 1927, firmly rooted in the Art Deco period. The composition presents a refined female figure accompanied by leopards, emphasizing themes of sensuality, control,...Regular price From $27.54 -
Louis Icart beautiful woman riding horse Thoroughbreds, Pur Sang
Thoroughbreds (Pur Sang), created in the 1920s–1930s, is an elegant etching with aquatint that depicts a graceful woman riding a spirited horse. The composition blends motion and refinement, with the horse’s strength contrasting the rider’s poised...Regular price From $91.77
Louis Icart (1888–1950) was a French painter, illustrator, and printmaker best known for his glamorous and sensual portrayals of women during the Art Deco era. His work, marked by elegance, wit, and erotic charm, captured the spirit of Parisian sophistication between the two World Wars. Blending fine art with fashion illustration, Icart created images that were both commercially appealing and artistically refined.
Born in Toulouse, France, Icart showed early talent in drawing and design. He moved to Paris in 1907, where he began working in the world of fashion and illustration. His sketches quickly gained attention in haute couture circles, and he contributed regularly to leading fashion magazines of the time, such as La Vie Parisienne, Le Sourire, and Les Modes. This background in fashion illustration strongly influenced his artistic style, characterized by graceful lines, flowing fabrics, and playful yet elegant compositions.
Icart’s etchings and aquatints became especially popular during the 1920s and 1930s. Often featuring beautiful women in light-hearted or seductive scenarios—sometimes accompanied by whimsical elements like cats or swans—his works appealed to the rising middle and upper classes in Europe and the United States. He frequently used techniques like drypoint and hand coloring, which gave his prints a soft, painterly quality.
Though largely associated with decorative art, Icart also produced powerful and more somber works during World War II, including a series titled L’Exode, which documented the suffering of civilians during the German occupation of France. These darker works reveal a deeper and more reflective side of his artistic range.
Louis Icart died in Paris in 1950. While his reputation waned after the war, his work was rediscovered in the late 20th century and has since gained renewed appreciation among collectors and historians of Art Deco. Today, Icart is recognized as a key figure in early 20th-century French art, celebrated for his ability to blend beauty, humor, and eroticism into a uniquely Parisian visual language.