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Charles Emile Egli

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Nationality
  
Swiss, French

Name
  
Charles Egli

Occupation
  
Engraver

Charles Emile Egli
Born
  
30 March 1877 (
1877-03-30
)
Aigle, Switzerland

Died
  
11 January 1937(1937-01-11) (aged 59) Paris, France

Charles Emile Egli (known as Carlegle; 30 March 1877 - 11 January 1937) was a Swiss-born illustrator and painter who spent most of his life in Paris.

Contents

Early years

Charles Emile Egli was born in Aigle, Switzerland on 30 March 1877. He was educated in Aigle and then at the college of Vevey. When he was eighteen he attended engraving classes of Alfred Martin at the school of industrial arts in Geneva. Four year later he moved to Paris, where he stayed the rest of his life. Egli studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.

Career

Egli adopted the pseudonym of Carlegle. He soon became known in satirical journals like Le Rire, Le Sourire, La Vie Parisienne, L'Assiette au Beurre, Fantasio, La Gazette do Bon Ton, Les Humoristes and Qui lit rit. Egli excelled in wood engraving. His illustrations for Daphnis et Chloe exhibited in the autumn Salon of 1913 launched his career. From then until his death in 1937 he illustrated books by classical and contemporary authors such as Virgil, Paul Valery, Blaise Pascal, Paul Verlaine, Anatole France and Charles Maurras. He was naturalized in 1927.

Charles Emile Egli died in Paris on 11 January 1937. He was the subject of a book by Hugues Delorme published in 1939.

Selected works

Books that Egli illustrated include:

  • Carnet d'un Combattant by Paul Tuffrau, Payot - appeared in 1917, under the pseudonym of lieutenant E.R., with 64 pen drawings
  • Frontispice in the review L'Encrier, founded by Roger Devigne in May 1919
  • La Petite Fille aux Papillotes, original wood engraving in the review L'Encrier (15 October-15 November 1919)
  • Daphnis et Chloe by Longus, chez Pichon in 1919
  • Le Train de 8h47 by Georges Courteline, Paris, Societe litteraires de France
  • Les Linottes by Georges Courteline, Paris, Editions litteraires de France
  • Les Aventures du Roi Pausole by Pierre Louys, first published by Fayard (« Modern Bibliotheque ») in 1908, then with different illustrations by Briffaut in 1924
  • Mon Amie Nane by Paul-Jean Toulet, 18 original wood engravings, Paris, Leon Pichon, 1925
  • Lysistrata d'Aristophane, Paris, Editions Briffaut, 1928
  • Maxime de Duvernois, Babou, 1929
  • Le Sopha de Crebillon, Mornay, 1933
  • Nudite de Colette, La Mappemonde, 1943 (posthumous)
  • L'Arlequin aux Jacinthes by Maurice Venoize, Boivin et Cie, undated
  • Engravings from Les Linottes

    References

    Charles Emile Egli Wikipedia