A master of Belgian Symbolism, rediscovered.
Félicien Rops’s (1833–98) erotic works remain provocative today—in the nineteenth century, they transgressed every boundary of art. With a keen eye and a sharp pen, Rops exposed the hypocrisies of the respectable middle class. “I am Rops, and I wish to be no other!” he declared and adhered to this maxim throughout his life.
The most poisonous berry of Symbolism, a scourge of the bourgeoisie—many terms have been used to describe Rops’s radical art. Celebrated by writers such as Charles Baudelaire and Joris-Karl Huysmans, he was a transgressive figure who deliberately aimed his works against the double standards of bourgeois society. His pictures, which represent a high point of printmaking and draftsmanship from the period, invite a critical examination of fin-de-siècle social attitudes, particularly with regard to gender roles.
208 pages | 93 color plates | 9.06 x 10.63 | © 2026
Art: Art--General Studies, European Art
History: European History
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Between Convention and Claim to Truth. Félicien Rops and His Time
JULIANE AU
‘Rops’s free spirit … is an expression of a comprehensively educated and timelessly thinking mind’
Véronique Carpiaux in conversation with Jonas Beyer
Eroticism, Death and the Appropriation of the Female Body in the Works of Félicien Rops
ELISABETH BRONFEN
Inter amicos: Félicien Rops and the Private Lives of Art
DAAN VAN HEESCH
Catalogue
‘Je procède presque toujours à la diable’. A Glossary of Félicien Rops’s Printmaking Process
ANASTASIA BELYAEVA
Appendix