Adele-Anaïs Colin Toudouze


Adele-Anaïs Colin Toudouze was a fashion plate illustrator born in the Ukraine. She was born to a painter and lithographer, Alexandre-Marie Colin and his wife, who was also a painter.

Biography

Anaïs was the second oldest sister of the Colin family. She had an older sister, Héloïse, and two younger sisters, Laure and Isabelle. All of the siblings were artists and Héloïse and Anaïs worked closely together on many projects for fashion plate illustrations and had similar styles. They came from a long line of ancestors that were also artists including, Jean-Baptise Greuze. The daughters learned skills from their father instead of attending an academy.
Anaïs’ father was a supporter of the Romantic movement and close friends to Eugène Delacroix, Théodore Gericault, and Paul Gavarni. This sparked Anaïs’ interest in the Romantic movement as well, and she followed her father’s footsteps in joining that style for her artwork. Her father had a studio called Pére in the “center of the artistic activity in Paris.” This kept the girls very involved and immersed in the art world. Each of the girls won awards and medals at the Salon between the ages of 14-20. Their paintings and illustrations were admired by viewers. Unlike other female artists during this time, the Colin sisters did not keep to historical or religious themes that were considered high art, and were encouraged by their father to learn proper techniques even though they did not receive official academic training.
Anaïs went to marry an architect and aquafortist engraver named Gabriel Toudouze in 1845. They were only married for 9 years before he died in 1854, leaving Anaïs to take care of their three young children. To provide for her family, Anaïs worked and produced many fashion illustration plates for fashion magazines, journals, and books.
Anaïs’ daughter Isabelle followed in her mother’s footsteps and became a fashion illustrator and painter. Her oldest son Gustave became a novelist, and his son Georges-Gustave wrote a book about his family's fashion illustration and artistic history titled, Le Costume françois. Her second son also Edouard became a painter. Anaïs died in 1899.

Professional work

Anaïs worked for over 35 fashion publications during her career. Fashion magazines became hugely popular from 1830 – 1870, providing ample work for female illustrators. She did the majority of her work for the fashion magazine in France called La Mode Illustrée. La Mode was distributed weekly and highlighted Victorian fashion trends of the time including accessories to go with the piece. All of the prints for the magazine were hand-colored and inserted with text descriptions explaining the fashions being showcased. Anaïs did not only illustrate for French fashion publications, she also illustrated for British fashion journals such as La Belle Assemblee, The Queen, and Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine. Additionally, she illustrated books, depicting leisure and historical romantic scenes. Her main competitor who also did fashion plates was Jules David. David was a painter and lithographer that worked with Adolphe Goubaud, a publisher.
When fashion plates became a popular form of illustration this provided a way for Anaïs's work to be mass produced. Instead of making the illustrator redraw the same exact image over and over, the artist would either etch, engrave, or lithograph the image and then color it in by hand. This form of production was much more efficient and realistic to produce fashion magazines at the weekly rate they were being printed. The figures being depicted in fashion plates were often very stiff and placed in positions that displayed the fashions best. One of the downsides to fashion plates are that they did not show three-dimensional perspectives.
Anaïs ended up having a slightly more successful career than her sister Héloïse due to the fact she lived longer and had a larger collection of work. Museums like The Metropolitan Museum of Art carry a collection of her prints while others are still around for sale.

Principal works