Born and still residing in Bordeaux, Mohlitz became one
of the leading figures for a new generation of French printmakers,
including two other artists on this site – Erik Desmazieres
and Francois Houtin.
Influenced by Odilon Redon and Rodolphe Bresdin, Phillippe
Mohlitz brought to the art of engraving a freedom of line
and profusion in detail rarely seen in contemporary etching.
A critic wrote of his engravings that he had not seen such
detail and luminosity since Durer. Equally impressive is
Mohlitz's imagination - in his densely engraved prints he
creates a world that is slowly revealed over repeated close
viewings, a world that is underpinned by an almost classical
preoccupation with, and brilliant execution of, composition
and light.
Mohlitz's work can be found in public collections throughout
Europe and North America, including the Bibliotheque Nationale
de France, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the New
York Public Library, the Brooklyn Museum. His catalogue
raisonné was presented in 1977 with an introduction
by Walter Koschatsky, curator of the Albertina in Vienna.