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Over a century ago, Suzanne Valadon began painting lively nude portraits of sensual and self-assured women, with full, curvy bodies and pubic hair. Occasionally, she painted nude men as well ...
Suzanne Valadon’s “The Blue Room” (1923). (Centre Pompidou, MNAM/CCI, Paris © Artists Rights Society, Image © CNAC/MNAM/Art Resource, N.Y.) Review by Philip ...
The “secret life” referred to in the subtitle of Catherine Hewitt’s new biography of the postimpressionist artist Suzanne Valadon is a misnomer. Valadon had no secret life: She was always ...
Her subjects defied conventional ideals of femininity. Suzanne Valadon, "Self-Portrait" (1927) (Collection of the City of Sannois, Val d’Oise, France, on temporary loan to the Musée de ...
Valadon was a model for the impressionists of Paris, then became one. 100 years later, the Barnes premieres the first major U.S. exhibit of her work Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel, opens Sept.
Paris: Suzanne Valadon and her son Maurice Utrillo were central figures in the harsh world of bohemian Montmartre at the turn of the 20th century. Valadon, born the illegitimate child of a ...
Marie-Clementine Valadon assured herself of some notoriety when she casually conceived an illegitimate son in the alleys of Montmartre early in 1883. But Suzanne Valadon—as she was renamed by ...
There is only one English-language biography of the French artist Suzanne Valadon — Renoir’s Dancer, a title that doubtless thrilled the marketing department of its publisher, Icon Books.
Over a century ago, Suzanne Valadon began painting lively nude portraits of sensual and self-assured women, with full, curvy bodies and pubic hair. Occasionally, she painted nude men as well ...
Philadelphia — In the space of three small galleries in the Barnes Collection exhibition "Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel," you encounter one of the most exciting transformations in art ...