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Born in Toulouse, France, on 22
October 1882, Edmond Dulac was the only child of Pierre Henri Aristide Dulac
and Marie Catherine Pauline Rieu. The boy grew up in a comfortable petit
bourgeois home. Educated at the Lycée de Toulouse, Dulac showed an early
introversion and talent for drawing. By age sixteen he was able to render
professional art nouveau work. After studying law at the University of Toulouse
for two years, Dulac enrolled full time at the École des Beaux Arts in 1900.
There he roomed with close friend and fellow student Émile Rixens. In 1903
Dulac won a scholarship to the Académie Julien in Paris. His December 1903
marriage to Alice May de Marini, an American thirteen years his senior, quickly
dissolved and by 1904 he had left for England to start his artistic career.
Enamored of British culture, he changed the spelling of his first name to
"Edmund." |
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Dulac was an immediate success in England. He joined the London Sketch
Club soon after his arrival and later St. John's Art Club. His first commission
was the illustration of
Jane Eyre, a quintessentially British
project with which he was entrusted at the age of twenty-two. In April 1911 he
married Elsa Arnalice Bignardi, a shy, graceful girl of Italian and German
descent. |
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Dulac is best known as an illustrator of gift books and
children's books. His favorite medium was watercolor. From 1890 to 1920,
British book illustration was preeminent and Dulac's career flourished. He also
collaborated with his friends W. B. Yeats and Sir Thomas Beecham on various
theater projects. In 1920 he composed music for a production of Yeats's
At the Hawk's Well. Yeats, Dulac, and Ezra
Pound staged Japanese Nō plays, with Dulac designing costumes, sets, and makeup
and composing music. |
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The hardships of World War I were still keenly felt
by 1920, a year which signaled the death of the gift book and the start of
Dulac's financial insecurity. In the same year
The Outlook stopped running Dulac's
cartoon drawings, which had been his only steady source of income. Though he
managed on income from portraits and frequent commissions for
American Weekly covers and postage stamps,
money was always to be a concern. In August 1923 Dulac and Elsa separated,
Dulac complaining that she was unable to challenge him intellectually. Close
friend Helen de Vere Beauclerk apparently was his equal in this respect,
however, and she moved in within the year. She was to be Dulac's companion
until his death. |
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Yeats dedicated
The Winding Stair to Dulac in 1933. In
1937 Dulac collaborated with Yeats on the BBC radio program,
My Own Poetry. Yeats selected seven of his
own poems, five to be spoken and two to be sung, with Dulac composing music for
the songs, accompaniment for the spoken poems, and interludes between. Partly
owing to the intervention of the producer in the choice of performers, the
performance did not come up to either man's expectations, with Yeats feeling
that the singing style and accompaniment were not true to his vision and Dulac
feeling that the two sung pieces were the only bright spots in a performance
that Yeats had sabotaged in rehearsal. Hostilities flared briefly but were soon
smoothed over. Yeats died on 28 January 1939 and was buried in France; when his
body was reinterred in his native Ireland after the war, Dulac designed the
memorial for his friend's former resting place in Roquebrune. |
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By World
War II, Dulac had become the leading authority on postage stamp design. When
occupied France wanted to unify its colonies against Germany by issuing stamps
with the Cross of Lorraine, this project naturally fell to an enthusiastic
Dulac. The project was commissioned by Charles de Gaulle, who travelled to
Britain to discuss the matter. Dulac's wartime work culiminated in the Victory
stamp for France, using Léa Rixens, Émile Rixens's widow, as the model for
Marianne de Londres. For once he used the French spelling of his name in his
signature: "Edmond Dulac." |
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At the close
of his career, Dulac returned to illustrating children's books with the same
perfectionism that had characterized the rest of his work. He was in the middle
of one such project when he had his third heart attack and died 25 May 1953, at
the age of seventy. |