Roger Muhl (1929-2008) - Une pâle lueur rose






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Roger Muhl, Une pâle lueur rose, is an original lithograph on Vélin paper from 1986, in a limited edition and signed by the artist, measuring 42 × 32 cm, in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
Roger MUHL: A pale pink glow
Original lithograph on vellum paper measuring 42 x 32 cm.
Numbered and signed by the artist with a pencil.
Printed on presses from the Mourlot workshop, Paris.
Work in perfect condition, never been framed.
We provide meticulous packaging, international tracking, insurance, and express shipping for all our deliveries.
Roger Mühl, born December 20, 1929, in Strasbourg, died April 4, 2008, in Mougins, was a French painter, draftsman, and sculptor.
He entered the École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs in Strasbourg, from which he graduated in 1948 to move to the territory of Belfort. He settled in 1954 in Montreux-Château and held his first Paris exhibition at the Galerie de Paris in 1960. Subsequently, he exhibited in Geneva, London, Milan, Dallas, Cologne, Stuttgart, Tokyo, Kyoto, Belfort, and New York. He primarily worked on the French Riviera. He was considered a figurative painter, a painter of Provence and its landscapes, primarily a painter of light and atmosphere; his impasto techniques served his style to establish the perspectives suggested solely by color.
Seller's Story
Roger MUHL: A pale pink glow
Original lithograph on vellum paper measuring 42 x 32 cm.
Numbered and signed by the artist with a pencil.
Printed on presses from the Mourlot workshop, Paris.
Work in perfect condition, never been framed.
We provide meticulous packaging, international tracking, insurance, and express shipping for all our deliveries.
Roger Mühl, born December 20, 1929, in Strasbourg, died April 4, 2008, in Mougins, was a French painter, draftsman, and sculptor.
He entered the École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs in Strasbourg, from which he graduated in 1948 to move to the territory of Belfort. He settled in 1954 in Montreux-Château and held his first Paris exhibition at the Galerie de Paris in 1960. Subsequently, he exhibited in Geneva, London, Milan, Dallas, Cologne, Stuttgart, Tokyo, Kyoto, Belfort, and New York. He primarily worked on the French Riviera. He was considered a figurative painter, a painter of Provence and its landscapes, primarily a painter of light and atmosphere; his impasto techniques served his style to establish the perspectives suggested solely by color.
