The Great Parade

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Portrait of the Artist as Clown

Edited by Gérard (Jean) Régnier (Clair)

View Inside Format: Cloth
Price: $90.00
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A beautiful book that showcases how circus figures and artifacts have been portrayed in art over the past two centuries

The circus is a dazzling world filled with acrobats and harlequins, tumblers and riders, monsters and celestial creatures. Now this engaging book sets that world in a new light, examining how painters, sculptors, and photographers from the eighteenth century to the present have used the circus as a springboard for their imaginative expression and have envisioned the clown as a metaphor for the modern artist.


The book presents more than 175 works by such artists as Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Rouault, Picasso, Chagall, and Léger. Some of these are masterful works shown for the first time; these range from the 18-meter stage curtain Picasso designed in 1917 for Erik Satie’s ballet Parade to more intimate works such as Nadar and Tournachon’s photographs of Pierrot as played by celebrated mime Charles Debureau.



Published in association with the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Gérard Régnier (Jean Clair), Director of the Musée Picasso, Paris, is the general editor of the catalogue.

“Given the melancholy and ennui so artfully and wistfully manifest in The Great Parade ‘enjoy’ may not be the right word. ‘Experience’ is more accurate. But what an experience!”—Heather Harrington, The Canada Post

ISBN: 9780300103755
Publication Date: July 11, 2004
Publishing Partner: Published in association with the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
424 pages, 9 3/4 x 11 1/4
10 b/w + 230 color illus.