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Exhibit - Carnivals, Cognac, and Cycling

Title image for the exhibition Carnivals, Cognac, and Cycling

Carnivals, Cognac, and Cycling

During the period spanning the turn of the century, Paris, one of the most vibrant cities in the world, experienced an explosion in print media. Now-familiar artists – Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Pierre Bonnard, and others – made names for themselves producing ephemera such as posters, journal illustrations, theatre programs, and advertisements.  Drawn from the Robert L. Haskins and Erwin A. Raible Collection of Fin-de-Siécle Prints in the GVSU Print and Drawing Cabinet, Carnivals, Cognac, and Cycling provides a view into the visual culture of late nineteenth-century France, with special attention given to entertainment, advertising, and popular activities in Paris.

Over the 2019 winter semester (January-April), fourteen GVSU students conducted research for this exhibition in the Modern Art and Modernity course, taught by Assistant Professor Ellen Adams (Art Gallery/Frederik Meijer Honors College). Each student “adopted” one work of art for in-depth study, produced original research, and presented their findings to their classmates and now to the university as a whole.

Click to learn about French Print Exhibitions

This exhibit is no longer on display.

L.V. Eberhard Gallery
November 2, 2020 - March 5, 2021

Page last modified May 20, 2026