1894/Gouache on paper laid down on canvas
169.5 x 76.7 cm
Permanent Exhibition: From the Renaissance to the 20th Century – 500 Years of Western Paintings
Exhibition period:Saturday April 12~Sunday June 22, 2025
Permanent Exhibition Gallery 6 in the New Wingof Tokyo Fuji Art Museum
Permanent Exhibition: From the Renaissance to the 20th Century – 500 Years of Western Paintings
Exhibition period: Saturday July 12~Monday September 15, 2025
Permanent Exhibition Gallery 6 in the New Wing of Tokyo Fuji Art Museum
SUMMARY
Founded in Paris in 1791, Café Riche, located at the corner of Boulevard des Italiens and Rue Le-Peletier, was one of the city's most renowned establishments frequented by politicians, artists, writers, and other notable figures. During the café's renovation in 1894, many artists contributed to its decoration under the direction of architect Albert Ballu. The exterior walls between the windows on the café’s mezzanine level were adorned with 17 mosaic murals, created by the workshop of the Italian mosaic artist Facchina, based on cartoons by Forain. The subjects depicted in these cartoons were figures drawn from Forain's illustrations in newspapers and magazines, such as The Cyclist, The Supper, The Little Girl Selling Violets, The Paperboy, Young Woman Wearing a Hat at the Racetrack, The Waltz, The Confession at the Ball, The Woman with a Mask and Black Gloves, Forain Sketching in Trouville, and The Errand Girl of a Women’s Clothing Store. The murals depicted subjects that were relatively novel for the time. However, the French writer Goncourt lamented, “Oh! The new decoration of Café Riche, I have never seen anything so horribly ugly, with its macabre frescoes by Forain and its colorful caryatids by Raffaelli on this mishmash of Oriental and Renaissance architecture from Faubourg Saint-Antoine. Ah! My old cafés, my old restaurants, all simply unified in gold and white!” These pieces were harshly criticized for being entirely unsuitable for adorning the exterior walls of a prestigious restaurant. Due to the negative reception, Forain’s mosaic murals were removed in 1898 and auctioned off. Some of these mosaic murals and their preparatory cartoons are now housed in the collections of the Musée des Arts Décoratifs and the Musée Carnavalet in Paris. This piece, depicting a woman attempting to open an umbrella, is one of Forain’s cartoons for the murals at Café Riche. The woman in the illustration wears a ribbon in her hair and a ‘tailored suit,’ a fashionable style for women in the late 19th century. The jacket features a distinctive puffed shoulders, which became popular in the 1890s. In the background, an advertising column—a motif frequently used by many artists of the time—can be seen. Near the column, a man holding an umbrella suggests that the rain has already begun, while the woman is just about to open hers. This depiction of everyday life is characteristic of Forain, who often captured such moments in his illustrations.
ARTIST
Jean-Louis Forain
1852-1931
List of artworks by the same artist
INFORMATION

La construction moderne,Paris,15 December 1894, p121-124 Jean-Louis Forain,Petit Palais,2011
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