Geneviève Claisse
Born(1935-07-17)17 July 1935
Quiévy, France
Died30 April 2018(2018-04-30) (aged 82)
Dreux, France
NationalityFrench
Known forPainting

Geneviève Claisse (French pronunciation: [ʒən(ə)vjɛv klɛs]; born 17 July 1935, in Quiévy – died 30 April 2018, in Dreux)[1] was a French geometrical abstract painter.

A relative to Auguste Herbin, her painting vocation was born through reading the magazine Art d'aujourd'hui, tribune of geometrical abstraction.[2]

Claisse was the great niece of abstract painter Auguste Herbin, a founder of the Parisian association of artists Abstraction-Création. Herbin saw Claisse's work for the first time when she was eighteen years old, and encouraged her to continue painting. In Herbin's mind, Claisse was "le successeur désigné par le destin et par l'hérédité" ("the successor appointed by destiny and heredity"). Like Herbin, Claisse's work shows a devotion to the ideals of formal purity and the perfection of execution. At this young age she worked tirelessly, often working at night after a day in the studio, carefully painting abstract forms on bold, colorful canvases.[3]

Chronology

  • 1958 - First personal exhibits in the Galerie Caille in Cambrai and Galerie Hybler in Paris.
  • 1959 - Moves to Paris and shares a studio with Herbin.
  • 1961 - First exhibit in the Galerie Denise René in Paris where she will regularly exhibit in the following years.
  • 1967 - Museum of fine arts of La Chaux-de-Fonds. Biennale de Paris.
  • 1968 - "Art optique" at the museum of fine arts of Oslo.
  • 1970 - Paris: Claisse, Galerie Denise René.
  • 1971 - Amsterdam: Claisse, Galerie d'Eendt.
  • 1972 - Modern art center of Alençon.
  • 1978 - Paris: Claisse, Concepts multilinéaires, Galerie Denise René.
  • 1981 - Paris: Claisse, Geneviève Claisse, Galerie Denise René.
  • 1983 - Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille.
  • 1989 - Musée Matisse du Cateau-Cambrésis (permanent collection).

In 1965, she focused her work on color (Cercles, ADN).

Further reading

  • Germaine Greer, The Obstacle Race: The Fortunes of Women Painters and Their Work, Tauris (1979)

Mon vocabulaire s'ouvre à la recherche du mouvement - et des espaces multiples - animant le plan de la surface peinte. Le cercle et le triangle, traités tour à tour et séparément, sont des thèmes privilégiés de compositions sérielles où la simplicité extrême des formes est transfigurée par l'intensité chaque fois différente des rapports de couleur.

(My vocabulary is open to the research of movement – and of multiple spaces – which animates the plan of the painted surface. The circle and the triangle, addressed one after the other and separately, are my favorite topics of serial compositions where the extreme simplicity of the shapes is transfigured by the intensity, every time different of the color relationship)

Geneviève Claisse

References

  1. "Geneviève Claisse, figure de l'abstraction géométrique, est décédée". 2 May 2018.
  2. "Geneviève Claisse". Nikola Rukaj Gallery. Retrieved 2019-03-30.
  3. Szymusiak, Dominique (1982). Musée Matisse, Palais Fénelon Le Cateau-Cambrésis Nord: guide de visite. Tourcoing, France: Presses Georges Frère. pp. 20–22.
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