Apollo Magazine

Nineteenth-Century French Drawings from the Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art considers how the invention of new chalks and pastels encouraged artists to experiment

Monsieur Boilleau at the Café (detail; 1893), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. The Cleveland Museum of Art

Key works from the Cleveland Museum of Art’s impressive holdings of 19th-century French drawings reveal how the development of new kinds of chalk, pastel, paper and other materials encouraged artists to experiment. The exhibition (20 January–11 June 2023) brings together 50 works; highlights include Adolphe Appian’s delicate Three Fishermen along the Banks at the Edge of a Forest (1868) which uses white chalk and charcoal on woven paper, Toulouse-Lautrec’s colourful pastel work Monsieur Boileau at the Café (1893) and Edgar Degas’s Sheet of Studies and Sketches (1858), completed during his first trip to Italy in 1858. Find out more on the Cleveland’s website.

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Sheet of Studies and Sketches (1858), Edgar Degas. Cleveland Museum of Art

Monsieur Boileau at the Café (1893), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Cleveland Museum of Art

Three Fishermen along the Banks of a River at the Edge of a Forest (1868), Adolphe Appian. Cleveland Museum of Art

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