Marc Chagall (1887-1995) - Angels





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Marc Chagall, Angels, a 1982 lithograph plate-signed as a limited-edition heliogravure after a painting on vellum, 50 × 40 cm, produced in France in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
Marc Chagall (1887-1985) (after)
Jacob weeps for Joseph's tunic
Heliogravure after a painting by the artist
Signed in the plate
Printer Atelier Draeger
On vellum paper 50x40 cm including the mat
Excellent condition
Marc Chagall’s art occupies a unique space in modern history, bridging the emotional, dreamlike worlds of his contemporaries with the radical shifts of the 20th century. While he shared a profound sense of Spanish identity and a love for poetic symbolism with Joan Miró, Chagall’s deeply personal, folklore-inspired style contrasted sharply with the geometric fragmentation of Pablo Picasso or the razor-sharp surrealist precision of Salvador Dalí. Instead of deconstructing reality like Picasso, Chagall infused it with a floating, ethereal lyricism where lovers, fiddlers, and levitating animals became universal icons of memory and hope. Whether compared to the structural weight of Eduardo Chillida or the eventual pop consumerism of Andy Warhol, Chagall’s legacy remains distinctly defined by its unyielding, poetic color and an emotional warmth that chose magic over raw subversion.
Careful packaging and international registered shipping
Marc Chagall (1887-1985) (after)
Jacob weeps for Joseph's tunic
Heliogravure after a painting by the artist
Signed in the plate
Printer Atelier Draeger
On vellum paper 50x40 cm including the mat
Excellent condition
Marc Chagall’s art occupies a unique space in modern history, bridging the emotional, dreamlike worlds of his contemporaries with the radical shifts of the 20th century. While he shared a profound sense of Spanish identity and a love for poetic symbolism with Joan Miró, Chagall’s deeply personal, folklore-inspired style contrasted sharply with the geometric fragmentation of Pablo Picasso or the razor-sharp surrealist precision of Salvador Dalí. Instead of deconstructing reality like Picasso, Chagall infused it with a floating, ethereal lyricism where lovers, fiddlers, and levitating animals became universal icons of memory and hope. Whether compared to the structural weight of Eduardo Chillida or the eventual pop consumerism of Andy Warhol, Chagall’s legacy remains distinctly defined by its unyielding, poetic color and an emotional warmth that chose magic over raw subversion.
Careful packaging and international registered shipping

