“Elégante Au Chien Yorkshire”
Intaglio engraving signed in the margin in pencil, dated 13 and numbered 13/50
Dry stamp from publisher in Brussels sheet 78x56,
dimension of the bowl 47x56
Frame under green 86x64
- €260 -
Millière began by studying painting at the Le Havre School of Fine Arts.
In Paris from 1889, he entered the Decorative Arts and attended certain Beaux-Arts workshops.
His first graphic works were posters and scores for the company Le Boulch and Le Divan Japonese (1899), then he became an illustrator in various newspapers including Fantasio (1917), Bagatelles, La Vie parisienne, Le Frou-frou, Le Sourire, le Gai-Paris, etc. Contemporary with those of Louis Icart, his “Little Women” were to experience great success, and during the 1920s, American periodicals reprinted his creations, associated with the “Gai Paris” of the Roaring Twenties.