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Tetes Byzantines

Alphonse Mucha – Têtes Byzantines (c. 1897)
Stone Lithographs on Wove Paper
Sheet Size: 20.8 x 14.5 inches (each)

Alphonse Mucha’s Têtes Byzantines (Byzantine Heads) is one of the most iconic and refined examples of his masterful Art Nouveau style. Published around 1897, this pair of stone lithographs features two idealized female portraits—often referred to as the Blonde and the Brunette—framed by lush, decorative motifs that echo the ornate aesthetics of Byzantine art.

Originally created as decorative panels, this pair was among several works Mucha designed not as advertisements but as art for the home—a shift that signaled growing demand for fine art prints accessible to the public. These panels were published by Champenois, Paris.

SKU: M-MUCHA-125006 Artist: Tag:
Nicole Wolff
Gallery Director

Mucha was famous for his commercial posters, which had a wide audience, but he also worked in a variety of other media, including furniture, jewelry, and theatrical sets. He mostly worked in Vienna and Paris but was also in Chicago, where he taught at the Art Institute, from 1904 to 1910. There, he introduced his interpretation of the "new art" to a United States audience. The densely patterned posters epitomize the Art Nouveau interest in natural forms, decoration, and a rejection of the anonymity of mechanical production.