Louis Icart Paintings


Louis Icart was a French artist known for his drawings of glamorous women that became popular during the Art Deco period. Born on December 9, 1888, in Toulouse, France, Icart showed an early interest in drawing and moved to Paris in 1907 to pursue his artistic career. He initially worked as a fashion illustrator, creating designs for couturiers and illustrating for magazines such as 'La Critique Théâtrale.'

During World War I, Icart served in the French army, and his experiences during the war influenced his subsequent artwork. After the war, his style developed and he became particularly associated with the Art Deco movement, which emphasized sleek elegance, linear forms, and a fascination with modernity. Icart's etchings and aquatints often depicted sensual, liberated women of the 1920s – the flappers – capturing the essence of the era's joie de vivre.

Icart's popularity peaked in the 1920s and 1930s, and he enjoyed considerable success in the United States as well as Europe. His work was exhibited in prominent galleries, and he gained a reputation for his sophisticated technique and the romantic, sometimes mildly erotic, quality of his prints. He also illustrated several books, including a 1946 edition of 'Carmen' by Prosper Mérimée.

As the Art Deco movement waned and tastes changed, Icart's prominence faded. However, he continued to work until his health declined. Louis Icart passed away on February 20, 1950, in Paris. Although his work was somewhat forgotten in the immediate aftermath of his death, there has been a resurgence of interest in his oeuvre, particularly among collectors of Art Deco graphics and early twentieth-century French art.