Rating and value of paintings by Louis Icart

Louis Icart, oil on canvas

If you own a work by or after the artist Louis Icart, and would like to know its value, our state-approved experts and auctioneers will offer you their appraisal services. Our specialists will carry out a free appraisal of your work, and provide you with a precise estimate of its current market value. Then, if you wish to sell your work, we'll guide you towards the best possible arrangement to obtain the optimum price.

Louis Icart artist's rating and value

Linked to the Art Deco movement, Louis Icart is a French painter, sculptor and engraver. Today, this prolific painter is relatively well-regarded on the art market, and his works sell for as little as €10, rising exponentially to €77,750. In 2022, a painting entitled Sur le banc, depicting a seated woman with an umbrella, sold for €6,500.

Order of value from a simple work to the most prestigious

Technique used

Results

Sculpture

From €10 to €1,990

Drawing - watercolor

From €70 to €19,000

Print - multiple

From €10 to €27,340

Oil on canvas

From €80 to €77,750

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Artist's style and technique

Inspired by the great painters of the Rococo period in France, such as Fragonard, Watteau and Boucher, Louis Icart (1888-1950) places particular emphasis on the ornamentation of his works, giving them a Baroque bent. His work is often considered fickle, antinomian or even provocative. However, he was able to disregard the characteristics of the frivolous painters of the 18th century and develop his own style. He combined rococo with art deco, defined by Cartesian geometry and colors that oscillated between pastel and virulent hues, giving rise to a luminous, dynamic and meticulous art.

Louis Icart, etching

Louis Icart, painter from art deco to roccoco

Louis Icart's aunt, discovering her nephew's passion and talent for drawing, encouraged him to leave his native Toulouse for Paris. She was particularly renowned as a milliner during the Belle Époque, running the Maison Valmont. He thus immersed himself in the world of haute couture illustration. The periodical "La Critique Théâtrale" hired him to illustrate its pages, and he also put his talent to work for the haute couture houses, drawing for their catalogs. Having previously taken up engraving, he was encouraged to exhibit some of his work at the Salon des Humoristes, where his portraits of glamorous, erotic women delighted the public.

Young, energetic and unconditionally imaginative, Louis Icart captures the Parisian art world of the 1920s and 1930s, which experienced a telluric tremor under the weight of Cocteau, Josephine Baker, Poiret and Erté, to name but a few. From Watteau's art, Icart retains lush interiors, animated expressions, the importance of form even more than substance, and female characters often drawn from mythology. Icart was also influenced by the work of the Venetian painter Veronese in Baroque decoration. In the end, he learned from the Impressionists and readily considered himself an "Impressionist painter", paying homage to those who had shaped his childhood, such as Degas and Monet.

At the age of twenty-four, Louis Icart had the privilege of having his work exhibited in an exhibition dedicated to him in Paris, then a year later in Brussels. Louis Icart exhibited at the Galerie Simonson in Paris from 1920 onwards, before moving to the United States, where he presented works in a typically Art Deco style at the Belmaison Gallery in New York. The prints he exhibited enjoyed brief success in North America until 1932. His repertoire included over five hundred engravings, as well as collaborations with various artists to illustrate books with explicitly erotic images. In 1940, sensitive to the plight of many of his fellow creatures, he began a series of engravings he called "l'exode" (the exodus).

Louis Icart's imprint on his era

Louis Icart's watercolors remain his rarest works, as he devotes most of his time to oil painting, preferring watercolors for sketches. Paradoxically, however, it is in this field that his potential is most tangible. Icart's watercolors are fragments of dreams, and in this medium he illustrates the imaginary world of Baudelaire's poems, in this case, Les Fleurs du Mal.

Despite the success he enjoyed during his lifetime, Louis Icart fell into oblivion and was ousted from the art scene. Nevertheless, some of his paintings were discovered in the 1970s, hidden in the attic of an art school, and restored his reputation. Today, his work is once again attracting great interest.

Recognizing the artist's signature

Louis Icart signs his works with his full name in a cursive, graphic script with a clean, assertive pencil stroke.

Signature of Louis Icart

Knowing the value of a work

If you happen to own a Louis Icart work, don't hesitate to request a free appraisal using the form on our website. A member of our team of experts and accredited auctioneers will contact you promptly to provide you with an estimate of the value of your work, as well as any relevant information about it. If you're thinking of selling your work, our specialists will also be on hand to help you find alternative ways of selling it at the best possible price.

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