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Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics

Contributed by Gareth Hague on Apr 9th, 2020. Artwork published in
January 2020
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    Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics 1
    Source: www.gettyimages.co.uk License: All Rights Reserved.

    Paris Musées:

    This exhibition, the first to be dedicated to Niels Hansen Jacobsen (1861–1941) in France, invites visitors to an oneiric journey into the world of this Danish sculptor and ceramist, a contemporary of Antoine Bourdelle (1861–1929).

    His work was strongly marked by a taste for the bizarre, the ambiguous, even the macabre – the “uncanny”, to quote an expression coined by Sigmund Freud a few years later. His sculptures revived Nordic mythology and Scandinavian legends, the orality of folklore and the fantastic aspects of Andersen’s tales.

    From 1892 to 1902, Hansen Jacobsen settled in Paris. His studio at 65, Boulevard Arago became the meeting place for a group of francophile Danes, in a “cité d’artistes” where, among others, the ceramist Jean Carriès and the illustrator Eugène Grasset lived.

    Alias Harbour, sometimes electronically slanted, is used for headline graphics throughout, with Ivar Text for text.

    Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics 2
    Source: twitter.com License: All Rights Reserved.
    Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics 3
    Source: www.bernardlagace.com License: All Rights Reserved.
    Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics 4
    Source: www.bernardlagace.com License: All Rights Reserved.

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    • Ivar Text

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    1 Comment on “Les Contes Étranges de Niels Hansen Jacobsen at Musée Bourdelle exhibition graphics”

    1. See also the exhibition posters which use Zangezi, a different but likewise idiosyncratic typeface with spikey details:

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