Ah! prenez pitié de l'etat cruel où me laisse mon attachement - pour vous! Emile! Emile! un mot, un seul mot que - j'attends en comptant les minutes et dans une anxiété - qui (sic) me serait impossible de vous peindre. Je me - meurs d'inquiétude
Summary
A servant and another character sitting on wooden benches play cards on a table in a cabaret. The servant on the left seen from behind. The letter, the contents of which are reproduced above, comes halfway out of the pocket of his pants. The other character is in shirt sleeves, his glasses on his nose.
Courtesy of Boston Public Library
He came from a poor family. He worked in a factory while studying at a free art school. He was noticed by Emile Girardin and began to publish in his weekly fashion magazine "Fashion", and was also published in Charivari, Artiste, Illustración and other popular press of the time. He illustrated novels by Balzac and Eugène Su and short stories by Hoffmann. He chose a pseudonym from the name of a picturesque village in the Haute Pyrénées on the border with Spain, where he had worked for a time in his youth. Together with Granville, he participated in the collective collection of satirical stories and essays "The Devil in Paris", published by Pierre-Jules Etzel, in which Balzac, George Sand and Charles Nodier were also printed. One of Gavarni's favourite subjects was the Paris carnival and, among other things, girls dressed as debarers - sleeveless telnics with low necklines and tight pantaloons (outside the framework of carnival women in France, who wished to appear in public in pantaloons had to obtain special permission from the police). Gavarni published an album of engravings under this title (1848); the girl in the debarderie is depicted on the pedestal of his monument erected in Paris on the Place Saint-Georges.
Tags
Date
Source
Copyright info