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  1. Jean Schopfer (28 May 1868 – 9 January 1931) was a tennis player competing for France, and a writer, known under the pseudonym of Claude Anet. He reached two singles finals at the Amateur French Championships, winning in 1892 over British player Fassitt, and losing in 1893 to Laurent Riboulet. [1]

  2. National Gallery of Art. Jean Schopfer. Swiss, 1868 - 1931. Anet, Claude

  3. This painting was the right half of a decorative panel commissioned by Jean Schopfer, a writer who published under the pen name Claude Anet. In 1935, over 30 years after its completion, Vuillard cut the panel into two and reworked it; the other half, La Terrasse at Vasouy, the Garden, is also in...

  4. Commissioned in 1901 by sportsman and writer Jean Schopfer (who wrote under the 'nom de plume' Claude Anet) for his Paris apartment, 'La Terrasse at Vasouy' depicts members of the literary and artistic Paris of the time in the garden of a villa on the Normandy coast.

  5. Jean Schopfer – the man behind the pseudonym – may have been better known in his day as a tennis champion, international adventurer and playboy, but he certainly knew how to write.

  6. Jean Schopfer — the man behind the pseudonym — may have been better known in his day as a tennis champion, international adventurer and playboy, but he certainly knew how to write. A succès de scandale in its day, Ariane was one of the first truly international bestsellers of the twentieth century, and it isn’t hard to see why.

  7. Jean Schopfer (28 May 1868 – 9 January 1931) was a tennis player competing for France, and a writer, known under the pseudonym of Claude Anet. He reached two singles finals at the Amateur French Championships, winning in 1892 over British player Fassitt, and losing in 1893 to Laurent Riboulet.