Flamboyant, innovative and strikingly elegant, George Barbier (1882-1932) was one of the most important French illustrators of the 20th century.
He was the leader of a group of artists so fashionably dressed, they were nicknamed 'Knights of the Bracelet’ by none other than Vogue. His refined illustrations provided the visuals not only for chic Parisian magazines, but also works of literature by Decadents such as Charles Baudelaire, Théophile Gautier or Paul Verlaine.
From 1929, Barbier illustrated a scandalous book that, at this point, was already one and a half centuries old: Les Liaisons dangereuses, a novel in letters by Choderlos de Laclos.
It follows the former lovers Madame de Merteuil and Valmont, whose games of seduction entangle and corrupt those around them. In one such scheme, Merteuil plots revenge on a former lover by having his fiancée, Cécile de Volanges, seduced before marriage.
Barbier’s elegant illustrations merge the style of the 1920s with the highly sensuous yet scheming and cruel world of the novel’s Rococo setting. It was published after his death, in 1934.
In this illustration, we glimpse an intimate scene.
The cunning Madame de Merteuil, in her quest to corrupt the young and innocent Cécile, appears to instruct her in the art of seduction. However, this scene does not occur in the novel. So why did Barbier depict it this way?
When the novel first appeared in 1782, it was illustrated by Romain Girard.
One of the illustrations shows Cécile in her bedchamber, with exposed breasts, standing close to Madame de Merteuil to seek counsel. At this time, nipples were not as taboo as they became by the 1920s or are today; cleavages were so low that fashionable dresses sometimes exposed women’s nipples. Yet Barbier, who viewed this scene in the 1920s, may have re-interpreted it as an erotic element.
When Barbier re-interpreted the original illustration, his gaze was also informed by his queer contemporaries.
While not much is known about his personal life, he was active in Paris’s booming queer subculture during the 1920s. At the time, lesbian culture was vibrant in Montmartre’s artistic bars. In many of his artworks, Barbier thus depicts erotic and romantic moments between women — some of the few artworks in art history to intentionally showcase lesbian love and passion.
Barbier was one of those who defined the visual language of Art Deco and worked with major designers such as Erté and Lanvin. He reimagined Les Liaisons through the sensibilities of interwar Paris.
This game of cunning seduction features an Art Deco-inspired version of our signature border in Powdered Sage, finished with a hand-rolled edge.

