Skip to content

Alphonse Mucha "Les Saisons (The Seasons)"Set of Four Lithographs

This series of four lithographs, titled "Les Saisons," or "The Seasons," by Alphonse Mucha is one of three that he designed to represent the four seasons. Here, the seasons are depicted as sumptuous young female figures, with surroundings that symbolize the seasons for which they are allegories. All four of the brilliantly-colored panels are signed. Sold exclusively as a matching set.
product.metafields.product_details

Add to Wishlist

Please call +1 (212) 644-6400 or email us at email@macklowegallery.com for pricing information.

  • Product Details
  • Curator's Notes

Item #: ML-21451
Artist: Alphonse Mucha
Country: France
Circa: 1896
Dimensions: 39.25" height, 20.25" width.
Materials: Lithograph paper, Giltwood gesso frame
Signed: Signed, ''Mucha” on all four lithographs.
Literature: Pictured in: Alphonse Mucha: The Complete Posters and Panels by Jack Rennert and Alain Weill, G.K. Hall & Co., Publishers, Boston, pages 90-97, cat. 18.

Spring is depicted as a beautiful, rosy-cheeked woman with long blonde hair that reaches almost down to her ankles. The contrapposto figure is fashioning a lyre from a verdant green branch, using her luscious golden hair as strings. Songbirds flock to the allegorical figure, adding to the aural aura that this airy piece emits. Summer sits lethargically at the side of a pond, dipping her feet into the cool water and resting on a branch of ivy. She wears a crown of crimson poppies and her thin white robes appear to be falling off with the heat of the summer day. Autumn's hair is a deep, rich, reddish-brown, which echoes the colors of the dried leaves in the trees and on the ground below her. The allegorical figure is not looking directly into the viewer's eyes, but rather to the bountiful grapes she holds in her hand. She is crowned with the fall-blooming flower, chrysanthemum. Winter is wrapped in an icy blue shawl and is surrounded by snowy branches. The viewer is left to wonder if the allegorical woman is quietly whispering to the birds to teach them the song of spring to come; or, if she is using the songbirds that once celebrated new life with her as sustenance to make it through the bitter winter.
X