
| Artist | René Magritte |
| Year | 1966 |
| Printer | Henri Deschamps, Ateliers Mourlot, Paris |
| Museum | Museum of Modern Art, New York |
| Type | Original vintage lithographic poster |
| Condition | A — Overall Good |
This is an original lithographic poster created in 1966 for the landmark retrospective of René Magritte at the Museum of Modern Art in New York — one of the most significant exhibitions in the history of Surrealism, featuring 81 works spanning nearly four decades of the artist's career.
The image reproduces L'Idole (1965), one of the last great paintings of Magritte's career — a haunting, enigmatic composition in which a bird perches atop a figurative form, rendered with the quiet, unsettling precision that defines his work. Birds were among Magritte's most enduring motifs, appearing throughout his paintings as symbols of transformation, freedom, and the uncanny.
The reproduction was executed by master printer Henri Deschamps at the Ateliers Mourlot under the direct supervision of Magritte himself — who traveled to New York in 1965 for the opening of the exhibition, his first and only trip to the United States. The show subsequently travelled to the Rose Art Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, the University of California Berkeley, and the Pasadena Art Museum.
Magritte died in 1967, just a year after this poster was printed — making it one of the last works produced under his supervision.
An exceptional piece at the intersection of Surrealism, MoMA history, and the golden age of Mourlot printmaking.