Enhance your collection of artistic prints with the stunning 24" x 18" Giclee Art Print of Marc Chagall's masterpiece, CARMEN LE.

  • Artist: Marc Chagall 
  • Title: CARMEN 
  • Medium: LE Giclee Art Print
  • Size: 24" x 18"

Marc Chagall, Artist (1887-1985) 

Marc Chagall is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Considered a pioneer of the Modern art movement, his vast collection of timeless masterpieces is a rich legacy that continues to influence the world of Modern art. Marc Chagall was born July 7, 1887, in Vitebsk, Russia. In his early life, he attended local Jewish religious schools whose teachings would influence much of his later work. In 1910 Chagall moved to Paris and studied in a small art academy. Incorporating dreamlike imagery with hints of Cubism, popular in France at the time, Chagall created some of his most lasting work. After returning to Vitebsk in 1914, the outbreak of World War I trapped Chagall in Russia. He settled in Vitebsk, where he was appointed Commissar for Art in 1918, but he relinquished the position in 1920 and moved his family to Moscow. 

During World War II, Chagall fled to the United States and returned to France in 1947. In the later stages of his career, Chagall began working in sculpture, ceramics and stained-glass windows. Significant achievements exist in the form of large-scale commissions around the world, including creating stained-glass windows for the synagogue at the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem (completed 1961), the Stain-Etienne Cathedral in Metz (completed 1968), and the U.N. Building in New York City (completed 1964) and the All-Saint's Church in Mainz, Germany (Completed 1978). Chagall also painted the ceiling of the Pairs Opera House (completed 1964); and created murals for the New York Metropolitan Opera (completed 1964). In 1977 Chagall received the Grand Medal of the Legion of Honor, France's highest decoration. That same year, he became one of only a handful of artists in history to receive a retrospective exhibition at the Louvre. In 1985 Chagall died at the age of 97, the last surviving of the original European Master of Modern art. He was buried in Stain-Paul, in southeastern France.