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Aux Moulin Rouge (La Goulue et Sa Soeur)

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Aux Moulin Rouge (La Goulue et Sa Soeur)

Artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (French, 1864-1901)
Date1892
DimensionsPlate: 18 x 13 5/8 in.
MediumColor lithograph
ClassificationPrints
Credit LineFrederick B. and Kate L. Shoemaker Fund
Object number
1939.488
Not on View
Label TextThe famous nightclub the Moulin Rouge (Red Windmill) embodied the less respectable aspects of modern culture in 1890s Paris. However, this gathering place of the working class, prostitutes, artists, novelists, and anarchists also lured the affluent classes (note the top-hatted gentlemen in the background). The Moulin Rouge’s star attraction Louise Weber (1866–1929), a can-can dancer nicknamed La Goulou (The Glutton) because she would take male customers’ glasses as she twirled by their tables and quickly drink the contents. In his many depictions of her, Lautrec consistently emphasized her most recognizable features—topknot, black ribbon choker, and back-exposing dress—so that she is instantly recognizable, even, as here, from behind. In this print Lautrec shows her with her sister Jeanne, seemingly surveying her domain. Lautrec’s images of Paris’s entertainers, with their strong outlines, flat colors, cropped compositions, and often unflattering characterizations, created an immediate sensation. He showed a savvy understanding of the power of celebrity and the ways that “high” and “low” culture increasingly intersected in modern Paris.Exhibition History

Toledo Museum of Art, Toulouse-Lautrec, Jan. 28-Feb. 28, 1978.

Toledo Museum of Art, Paris: City of Art, Nov. 6, 2009-Mar. 14, 2010.

Toledo Musuem of Art, Fun and Games: The Pursuit of Leisure, Jun. 27-Sept. 21, 2014.

Toledo Museum of Art, In Motion: Dance and Performance in Art, September 18, 2015- January 3, 2016.

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