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RARE \"Erté\" Romain de Tirtoff Clipped Signature For Sale


RARE \
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RARE \"Erté\" Romain de Tirtoff Clipped Signature:
$139.99

Up for sale a RARE! "Erté" Romain de Tirtoff Clipped Signature.




ES-726

Romain

de Tirtoff (23 November 1892

– 21 April 1990) was a Russian-born French artist and designer known by

the pseudonym Erté, from the French pronunciation of

his initials (pronounced [ɛʁ.te], AIR TAY). He was a 20th-century artist and

designer in an array of fields, arts, costume and set design for film, theatre, and opera, and interior decor. Tirtoff was born Roman Petrovich

Tyrtov (Роман Петрович Тыртов) in Saint Petersburg, to a distinguished family with roots tracing

back to 1548, to a Tatar khan named Tyrtov. His father, Pyotr Ivanovich Tyrtov,

served as an admiral in the Russian Fleet. In 1907, he lived one year in Paris.

He said about this time "I did not discover Beardsley until when I had already been in Paris for a

year". Demoiselle à la balancelle is one of Erté's first

sculptures, if not the first. Made in 1907, at the age of 15 years, during a

stay in Paris. This work is less precise than his other sculptures, but

still Art Nouveau. Erté

considered this so minor and uninteresting that it does not appear in his

official biography, but the cartouche on the back indicates 'ERTE PARIS 1907',

in a triangle. In 1910–12, Romain moved to Paris to pursue a career as a

designer. In Paris he lived with Prince Nicolas Ouroussoff (December 17, 1879 –

April 8, 1933) up until the prince's death in 1933.[3] The decision to move to Paris was made despite

strong objections from his father, who wanted Romain to continue the family

tradition and become a naval officer. Romain assumed his pseudonym to avoid

disgracing the family. He worked for Paul Poiret from 1913 to 1914. In 1915, he secured his

first substantial contract with Harper's Bazaar magazine, and thus launched an

illustrious career that included designing costumes and stage sets. During this

time, Erte designed costumes for the Mata Hari.[4]Between 1915 and 1937, Erté designed over 200 covers

for Harper's Bazaar, and his illustrations would also appear in

such publications as Illustrated London News, Cosmopolitan, Ladies' Home Journal,

and Vogue. Erté is perhaps

most famous for his elegant fashion designs which capture the art deco period in which he worked. One of his earliest

successes was designing apparel for the French dancer Gaby Deslys who died in 1920. His delicate figures and

sophisticated, glamorous designs are instantly recognisable, and his ideas and

art still influence fashion into the 21st century. His costumes, programme

designs, and sets were featured in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1923, many productions of the Folies Bergère, Bal Tabarin, Théâtre Fémina, Le Lido[6] and George White's Scandals. On

Broadway, the celebrated French chanteuse Irène Bordoni wore Erté's designs. In 1925, Louis B. Mayer brought him to Hollywood to design sets

and costumes for the silent film Paris. There were many script problems, so Erté was given

other assignments to keep him busy. Hence, he designed for such films as Ben-Hur, The Mystic, Time, The Comedian,

and Dance Madness. In 1920

he designed the set and costumes for the film The Restless Sex starring Marion Davies and financed by William Randolph Hearst. By

far, his best-known image is Symphony in Black, depicting a

somewhat stylized, tall, slender woman draped in black holding a thin black dog

on a leash. The influential image has been reproduced and copied countless

times. Erté

continued working throughout his life, designing revues, ballets, and operas.

He had a major rejuvenation and much lauded interest in his career during the

1960s with the Art Deco revival. He branched out into the realm of limited

edition prints, bronzes, and wearable art. Two years

before his death, Erté created seven limited edition bottle designs for Courvoisier to show the different stages of the

cognac-making process, from distillation to maturation.[10] In 2008, the eighth and final of the remaining

Erte-designed Courvoisier bottles, containing Grande Champagne cognac dating

back to 1892, was released and sold for $10,000 apiece.



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