Marc Chagall
Fables and Folklore
Works on Paper
6th March to 4th May 2025
Chagall was born in the year 1887 in the city of Vitebsk, which was then part of Russia. After engaging in his studies in St. Petersburg, he made his way to Paris, where he formed friendships with influential figures in the avant-garde circle of artists, significantly shaping his artistic perspective. In 1917, he returned to his beloved native Vitebsk, where he was appointed as both the Director and Commissar of Fine Art. However, his imaginative and fantasy-based work soon irked the more conservative authorities, compelling him to leave for Moscow, where he took on the role of designer for the new theatre. In 1923, he returned to Paris, where he had the opportunity to meet the art dealer Vollard, for whom he illustrated notable works such as Gogol’s Dead Souls and the timeless Fables of La Fontaine. Between the years 1941 and 1947, Chagall moved back and forth between occupied France and the United States, ultimately settling in the picturesque region near Nice. Throughout his life, Chagall proved to be a prolific and innovative artist, with his work reflecting biblical stories, and the rich folklore from his formative years in Russia. He passed away in 1985, leaving behind a legacy that continues to inspire.
The Fables of La Fontaine
The etchings for La Fontaine’s Fables were commissioned by the famous art dealer Ambroise Vollard and his choice of the ‘romantic’ artist Chagall to illustrate the ‘classical’ French masterpiece created a considerable furore at the time, even being debated in the Chamber of Deputies. Vollard answered the question of Why Chagall? by saying, simply because his aesthetic seems to me in a certain sense akin to La Fontaine’s, at once sound and delicate, realistic and fantastic.
They are considered one of the great suites of the 20th century.
The Countryman and the Serpent Etching. Hand finished by Chagall £2950
The Little Fish and the Fisherman Etching. Hand finished by Chagall £3250
The Will explained by Aesop Etching. Hand finished by Chagall £3250
The Wolves and the Ewes Etching. Hand finished by Chagall £2950
Gogol’s The Dead Souls
In September 1923, emboldened by a letter received from his old friend the French poet Blaise Cendrars declaring ‘Come, you are famous here, and Vollard is waiting for you,’ Chagall left Berlin for Paris; a decision that was to have a profound affect on his future career. Vollard was indeed waiting for him with a commission to illustrate one of the deluxe livres de peinture that the dealer had a passion for. Chagall suggested Gogol’s Dead Souls, one of his and Bella’s favourite books and began work immediately.
The story follows the ignominious hero Chichikov’s epic journey across provincial Russia as he barters with bureaucrats and swindlers to buy up the names of dead serfs. It afforded him limitless scope for returning, in his imagination, to the rural Russia of his childhood and allowed him to tap into the ‘magic chaos’ that chimed with his own art and life.
The etchings for the Dead Souls were executed between 1923 and 1927 and printed in 1927 where they then lay in Vollard’s warehouse ‘sleeping their sweet sleep’ as Chagall put it. They were finally united with the text and published by Tériade in 1948 after Vollard’s untimely death.
The suite is a wonderful affirmation of the human spirit and life and all its contradictions or as Meyer so eloquently puts it: ‘This entire world of stupidity, malice, and selfishness is rendered transparent through humour…Everywhere, running through all the comical elements, and borne along by a sort of inner joyfulness, there appears the fantastic, rich, inexhaustible reality of Russian life.’
Chichikov Celebrates in his Nightshirt 1948 Etching £950
Chichikov is Punished by his Father 1948 Etching £950
Council of Officials 1948 Etching £950
Pelageia Shows the Way 1948 Etching £950
Pliushkin Scavenging Under a Bridge 1948 Etching £950
Stretched on the Bed 1948 Etching £950
The New Chief Official 1948 Etching £950
Tilling the Soil 1948 Etching £950
The Bible Series Lithographs
When Chagall met renowned printer, Fernand Mourlot in 1948 at his atelier in Paris, he realized that in lithography he had found the perfect graphic medium for his art. It rapidly became his preferred printing technique due primarily to the possibilities it offered with colour.
Following Tériade’s acquisition of the etched Bible Suite it was suggested that Chagall re-imagine a Bible Series in colour lithography. These lithographs, printed by the great French lithographers Mourlot Frères, were published in 1956. They were met with such critical praise that Chagall produced a further set in 1960.
Adam and Eve and the Forbidden Fruit Lithograph 1960 £750
Ahasuerus sends Vasthi away Lithograph 1960 £750
David and Absalom Lithograph 1960 £950
David and his Harp Lithograph 1960 £750
Eve Incurs God's Displeasure Lithograph 1960 £750
Jeremiah's Lamentations Lithograph 1960 £750
Job in Despair Lithograph 1960 £750
Meeting of Ruth and Boaz Lithograph 1960 £950
Naomi and her Daughters in Law Lithograph 1960 £750
Ruth at the Feet of Boaz Lithograph 1960 £750
Ruth Gleaning Lithograph 1960 £750
Sarah and Abimelech Lithograph 1960 £750
Sarah and the Angels Lithograph 1960 £850
Solomon Lithograph 1960 £1150
David saved by Michal Lithograph 1960 £700
Jeremiah Lithograph 1960 £1150
Celui qui Dit les Choses sans Rien Dire
Delicate and intimate, Chagall’s etchings for this suite were made in 1976 when he was 89 years old at the very end of his life. They were published in an edition of 225 only, one of the artist’s last and most personal works.
Published by Maeght, Chagall illustrated the words of the French poet Louis Aragon for this suite of 25 etchings with aquatint. Aragon was one of the founding members of the Surrealist movement which swept through the art world in the early 1920s.
Aragon’s poetry was strange and diverse, often swaying between the lyrical and the overtly political. The title of Chagall’s series – ‘Those who speak without saying anything’ – highlights the satirical bent to Aragon’s poetry, but also the key surrealist concept of unconscious action: ‘speaking’ without ‘saying’.
Untitled Etching 1975-76 £2500
Untitled Etching 1975-76 £2500
Untitled Etching 1975-76 £2500
Untitled Etching 1975-76 £2500
Other works available
Apollinaire Les Ateliers de Chagall Offset Lithograph 1976 £1750
Artists Portrait Woodcut 1976 £750
Clown with Bouquet Lithograph 1966 £850
Le Cirque Lithograph 1960 £850
Le Profil et l'Enfant Rouge Lithograph 1960 £750
Mother and Child in front of Notre-Dame Visions de Paris Lithograph 1960 £850
Untitled Lithograph 1950 £1250
Portrait Woodcut £750
Rêverie Lithograph 1969 £550
The Green Acrobat Lithograph £750
The Twelve Tribes of Israel A set of twelve original lithographs, 1962 Designed in 1962 by Marc Chagall as early studies for the Jerusalem windows. Printed in Paris by the renowned Atelier Mourlot. Lithograph 1962 £1950
Untitled (Portrtait) Offset £950
Envy From Seven Deadly Sins, a series of fifteen etchings. Edition of 300 £850
Gluttony From Seven Deadly Sins, a series of fifteen etchings. Edition of 300 £850
Frontispiece and Candlestick 1962 lithograph celebrating Chagall's Jerusalem windows. Lithograph £1700
La Maternité Etching Full set of 5 etching with drypoints to illustrate Marcel Arland's Maternité. From the edition of 960. £3000