
JOB Cigarette Ad by Alphonse Mucha
The JOB poster of 1898 is one of Mucha's most technically dazzling works. A woman reclines in a state of languorous reverie, smoke curling upward from her fingers in lines that echo and extend the sinuous curves of her hair — a masterclass in using the subject's own form as ornament. The golden, warm-amber palette and the fluid interplay between figure and decorative surround push the boundaries of what a commercial poster could achieve. Mucha makes abstraction feel inevitable rather than imposed.
As a canvas print from our Berlin studio, the woven surface adds warmth and depth to the golden tones and flowing linework. Archival pigment inks ensure museum-grade colour fidelity for years to come.
The JOB poster of 1898 is one of Mucha's most technically dazzling works. A woman reclines in a state of languorous reverie, smoke curling upward from her fingers in lines that echo and extend the sinuous curves of her hair — a masterclass in using the subject's own form as ornament. The golden, warm-amber palette and the fluid interplay between figure and decorative surround push the boundaries of what a commercial poster could achieve. Mucha makes abstraction feel inevitable rather than imposed.
As a canvas print from our Berlin studio, the woven surface adds warmth and depth to the golden tones and flowing linework. Archival pigment inks ensure museum-grade colour fidelity for years to come.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
The JOB poster of 1898 is one of Mucha's most technically dazzling works. A woman reclines in a state of languorous reverie, smoke curling upward from her fingers in lines that echo and extend the sinuous curves of her hair — a masterclass in using the subject's own form as ornament. The golden, warm-amber palette and the fluid interplay between figure and decorative surround push the boundaries of what a commercial poster could achieve. Mucha makes abstraction feel inevitable rather than imposed.
As a canvas print from our Berlin studio, the woven surface adds warmth and depth to the golden tones and flowing linework. Archival pigment inks ensure museum-grade colour fidelity for years to come.























