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"La
Belle Époque de la pub"
Musée de la Publicité, Paris
27 March–15 September 2002 |
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The Musée de la Publicité
in Paris, a museum dedicated to the preservation of materials used
in the advertisement of products, events, people, and even ideas,
recently displayed hundreds of popular print images and material-culture
objects from its holdings to demonstrate how the field of popular
advertising emerged at the end of the nineteenth century. (The collection,
which is part of the Union Centrale des Arts Decoratifs, is housed
in the same building as the Musée des Arts Decoratifs.) "La
Belle Époque de la pub" ("pub" being the French
shorthand for "publicité") provided clues as to
how a given product became significant or how a popular personality
gained the status of an icon through images encapsulating a theatrical
role or a well-known gesture. It also showed how certain issues
or historical events fired the imaginations of artists, writers,
or publicists and how these were interpreted in a variety of ways. |
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With the
material organized around interpretive themes linked to French cultural
life of the late nineteenth century, this exhibition successfully
documented how image-makers lionized performers or increased the awareness
and marketability of a given product. Large-scale posters that once
adorned the sides of buildings were produced by some of the leading
designers of the period; Parisians subliminally interacted with these
colorful images. What made this exhibition particularly valuable was
the intelligent way in which the posters were displayed. The juxtapositions
between actual memorabilia and the prints dramatically revealed the
power of the graphic arts in reaching the public. Visitors to the
show were immediately drawn into the organizational matrix of the
exhibition and guided into seeing the relationships between objects
and the idea, personage, or product being promoted so that they could
understand how publicity became a communicative tool for an entire
society. |
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| Fig.
2 Installation view of "La Belle Époque de la pub,"
with Pierre Bonnard's poster, La Revue Blanche, 1894. |
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| Fig.
3 Théophile Steinlen, La Rue, Affiches Charles Verneau,
1900. Poster. Musée de la Publicité, Paris |
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| Fig.
4 Théophile Steinlen, Motocycles Comiot, 1899.
Poster. Musée de la Publicité, Paris |
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On entering the exhibition, one came
face to face with a panoply of well-known examples. Among these were
Toulouse Lautrec's image of Aristide Bruant performing at the Ambassadeurs,
Lautrec's Moulin Rouge dedicated to La Goulue (fig. 1), and
Pierre Bonnard's fashionably dressed Parisienne used to advertise
the avant-garde periodical La Revue Blanche (fig. 2). This
overview of famous icons transported viewers back in time, enabling
them to see the ways in which posters became icons of an entire age,
even though they were here removed from the context of the society
in which they were originally produced. The show was installed in
several side roomsseparated by a corridorwhere various
themes pertaining to topics, products, or personalities of the moment
were intelligently interpreted. The long central corridor was dominated
by the huge poster of Théophile Steinlen's La Rue (fig.
3), which emphasized the power that this image had over the imagination
of the public. The poster depicted a cross-section of the Parisian
populace, and drove home the point that everyone, regardless of station,
was immersed in visual culture in 1900. Simply walking down a street,
as the visitor walked down this long corridor, the directness of these
images could not fail to have an impact. No one could remain immune
to their pull. Thus, as asserted at the outset of the exhibition,
visual culture at the turn of the century occupied a very significant
place in people's lives. |
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Each thematic section of the exhibition
employed wall labels, audiotapes of informational interviews, or historical
films projected on television monitors to help viewers understand
how people had reacted to various topical concerns at the turn of
the century. In the room dedicated to the beginnings of a consumer
society, considerable attention was devoted to the new places of consumption,
especially the department store, and to the new modes of transportation
that made consumption possible even beyond the urban center: the bicycle,
the motorcycle, and the automobile. The new modes of transportation
and their impact on society were visualized by major postermakers
such as Steinlen, who, in his Motocycles Comiot of 1899 (fig.
4) humorously showed how a chic young woman on her motorized machine
frightened geese out of her path while riding through the countryside. |
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Another area of the show focused on
the aggressiveness of the press. As dailies and weeklies increased
in number, publishers struggled to attract new readers and to keep
the old ones. They began to actively solicit advertisements for the
pages of their publications; likewise, an aggressive publicity campaign
was launched, via posters, to advertise the existence of new publications.
Publishers also intensified the rhetoric of their visual style. One
ominous image dominated this section of the show. The poster for La
Lanterne, a republican periodical opposed to the clerical domination
of French society, represented a frightening figure of a vampire-like
priest hovering over the newly constructed church of the Sacré
Coeur in Montmartre (fig. 5). Contemporary Parisians would have understood
that, in the battle between church and state, La Lanterne clearly
opposed the control of the former over the latter, since this section
of the city was considered the freest in the city. |
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Another theme in the exhibition was
the enlistment of postermakers by capitalists to create icons that
would be instantly recognizable. Among the firms that readily understood
the power of images was the tire manufacturer Michelin. Early on,
its publicists created the large character known as Bibendum (Bib,
for short) that became the company's logo. This cartoon figure, still
in use today, is a comical personification of a tire, fat and round,
with markings to represent tire treads. The first advertisements for
Michelin tires were indeed comical (fig. 6). A second, and equally
important consumer product was cigarette paper. Since one of the most
famous advertising images of the turn of the centuryAlfons Mucha's
poster of a femme fatale smoking a cigarettewas produced in
this era, the organizers of the exhibition went to some lengths to
elaborate on this product, and even arranged some of the original
Job papers in a glass case (fig. 7). The Mucha poster was not included
in the show, but the first poster designed for Job was on display;
this featured a chimney sweep rather than a beautiful woman (fig.
8). During the 1890s, as the company tried to expand its audience,
it targeted women and a more fashionable, international crowd by exchanging
the early male icon for the female one. In the end, it was Mucha's
image that became forever linked with Job in the mind of consumers
from this era and beyond. |
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The exhibition's final room was dedicated
to the ways in which artists were enlisted in the war effort. World
War I had devastating effects on France. Tens of thousands of soldiers
were killed or maimed and countless families uprooted, especially
in the northeastern part of the country. Steinlen, still a powerful
propagandist in 1918, created an evocative poster dedicated to the
homeless of the Aisne (fig. 9). Similarly, Francisque Poulbot, among
others, used images of innocent children to spur his countrymen to
action and direct their anger toward France's enemies. |
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By selecting examples from their extraordinarily
rich lithographic collection and by integrating material-culture objects
and films to provide a historical context, the curators of the Musée
de la Publicité succeeded in bringing their ideas to life in
a most effective way. They demonstrated clearly and with rare visual
acumen how the graphic arts were used in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century
France as the tools of promotion, education, and propaganda. They
also showed that there were many artists working in this expanding
field of commercial art. This display is a major start in the right
direction, although the lack of an accompanying catalogue meant that
only those with the good luck to be in Paris during the exhibition
benefited from its lessons. |
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Gabriel P. Weisberg
Professor of Art History
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis |
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