Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec


Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was a French post-impressionist painter. This controversial artist depicted the life of the Bohemian Paris of the 19th century in his works. He focused on imperfections of the human body: he portrayed figures in a caricature, blurring facial features and overdrawing facial expressions or gesticulation. If you would like this extraordinary art to “enter” your home, you cannot miss the reproduction of Henri de Toulouse’s paintings. Scenes of Parisian cabarets and theatres will give a unique character to your interior!

Henri Toulouse Lautrec paintings

Henri Toulouse-Lautrec is one of the most outstanding French bohemian painters. He was a controversial figure who, due to his small stature and characteristic appearance, aroused pity in some and disgust in others. Focusing on the imperfections of the human body is the artist's hallmark. The figures in his paintings and drawings are often crooked, slightly twisted, presented as if in a distorting mirror. Toulouse-Lautrec loved observing people, thanks to which he mastered the art of catching human emotions expressed in their expressions. An inseparable article of this unique artist was a notebook in which he recorded everyday events with just a few lines. For this reason, he was jokingly called a street documentarian, because he often drew women of easy virtue wandering the streets of Paris**. Toulouse-Lautreck's paintings** are full of dynamism, energy and movement. The artist drew inspiration from the places he visited every day.