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Jacqueline Marval

Jacqueline Marval was the pseudonym for Marie Josephine Vallet (19 October 1866 – 28 May 1932), who was a French painter, lithographer and sculptor.[1]

Jacqueline Marval
Portrait by Jules Flandrin (1907)
Born
Marie Josephine Vallet

(1866-10-19)19 October 1866
Quaix-en-Chartreuse, France
Died19 May 1932(1932-05-19) (aged 65)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Known forPainting
SpouseAlbert Valentin (m. 1886 - d. 1891)
Partner(s)François Joseph Girot, Jules Flandrin
Websitewww.jacqueline-marval.com

Early life edit

Vallet was born in Quaix-en-Chartreuse into a family of school teachers.[2] She was married in 1866, to a traveling salesperson, Albert Valentin, but separated from her husband in 1891 after the death of her son.[1] She moved to Grenoble and worked as a seamstress sewing waistcoats[3] before moving to Paris in 1900.[4] It was in 1900 when Vallet took on the pseudonym Jacqueline Marval, "Marval" being the composite of her first and last name "MARie VALlet."[5]

Career as an artist edit

 
Marval in her apartment, Paris, circa 1925

In 1894, Marval met the painter François Joseph Girot [fr] and began living with him in Paris, where she was introduced to Les Nabis group.[6] Girot introduced her to Jules Flandrin, another painter and a student of Gustave Moreau. The two fell in love, and Marval left Girot to move in with Flandrin in Rue Campagne-Première, in the Montparnasse area. She would live with him as his companion for 20 years.[7] As an artist, Marval worked primarily as a painter; however, she also made "lithographs, watercolours, pastels, engravings, tapestry designs and experimented with sculpture."[6]

Vallet's first works were rejected from the 1900 Salon des Indépendants, but she succeeded in having a dozen paintings shown in that exhibition the following year, in 1901. The works rejected in 1900 were bought by the art dealer Ambroise Vollard, who continued to support her work.[1]

Between 1901 and 1905, Marval worked frequently alongside Henri Matisse, Albert Marquet, and Flandrin, and the four influenced each other.[8]

In 1902, several of her paintings were displayed alongside works by Flandrin, Albert Marquet, and Henri Matisse in a gallery in Rue Victor-Massé curated by Berthe Weill, who was particularly interested in promoting the works of female artists living in Paris.[1] Marval also exhibited in the first Salon d'Automne, in 1902, where she showed her large scale painting Les Odalisques.[1]

In 1913, Marval was chosen by a jury made up of Gabriel Astruc, the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle, and the painters Maurice Denis and Édouard Vuillard to decorate the foyer of the new Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. She created a series of twelve paintings on the theme of Daphnis and Chloe.[9] The series was based on the Ballets Russes' production of Daphnis et Chloë , performed the year prior.[10]

Also in 1913, Marval protested against the removal from the Salon d'Automne of Kees van Dongen's The Spanish Shawl, and became friends with Van Dongen, setting up her studio near his. Marval and Flandrin moved into 40 rue Denfert Rochereau, which was next door to Van Dongen in 1914.[1] She attended his famous costumed ball in 1914.[1]

Marval's works began to be recognized across Europe and beyond; she exhibited in Barcelona, Liège, Venice, Zurich, Budapest, and Kyoto.[6]

Beginning in 1923, Marval was active in favor of the creation of modern art museums in Paris and Grenoble. Towards the end of her life she fell into poverty.[3] Marval died of cancer at the Hôpital Bichât in Paris in 1932.[1][3] After her death, her works were held in the Galerie Druet before it was closed in 1938 and they were sold. Her painting Portrait of Dolly Davis, 1925 is in the collection of the Milwaukee Art Museum.[11]

Les Odalisques, 1902-03 edit

 
The Odalisques, 1902-1903 (Museum of Grenoble).

Perhaps her most famous work, Les Odalisques, was made in 1902-03 and was first exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants in 1903. This painting depicts five women: three seated nude, one dressed and reclining on her elbow, and one standing, clothed and holding a tray. Les odalisques follows in the art historical tradition of large-scale orientalized bathing scenes, with a strong focus on the nude body and interaction between figures.[original research?]

Guillaume Apollinaire was struck by this work, and wrote in Chronique des arts in 1912 that "Mme. Marval has given the measure of her talent and has achieved a work of importance for modern painting. This strong and sensual work, freely painted and wholly personal in composition, line, and coloring, deserves to survive."[12] Les Odalisques now resides within the collection of the Musée de Grenoble and was last exhibited at the Musée Paul-Dini in 2018.[13]

Les Odalisques was not included in the historic 1913 Armory Show, as is frequently noted in literature on the artist. Instead, a different work by Marval, Odalisques au miroir, 1911, was shown at the Armory Show, after an invitation by Vollard.[14][15] Marval exhibited in the United States a number of additional times after the Armory Show.[5]

Critical reception and legacy edit

Critics gave Marval high praise during her career. In a 1911 issue of The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, for example, it was written that at an exhibition at the Druet Gallery, "The paintings of Madame Marval were among the most striking..."[16] Apollinaire, aside from his compliments to Les Odalisques, more generally makes comments on her work that refer to it as exciting, strong, and worthy of recognition.[12] Some critics referred to her as a Fauve, a reflection of her choice of palette, which was heavily influenced by Fauve and Impressionist painters who came before her.[6] According to Lucien Manissieux, a student of Flandrin, "Marquet, Flandrin, Matisse all awaited each work she produced with curiosity and emotion" and there is some evidence that her male peers borrowed from her "brilliant colour and formal economy of her painting."[8]

During her lifetime, Marval refused to exhibit in all-female exhibitions; yet, after her death, her career and work was celebrated in one.[2] The Société des Femmes Artistes Modernes (FAM) was a women artists' collective in Paris. FAM was headed by Marie-Anne Camax-Zoegger (1887-1952), "a bourgeois French Catholic woman."[2] They put on a retrospective of Marval's work in 1933 as part of their annual exhibition.[2] Marval, who did not identify as a feminist, was appropriated by FAM as one and has since been celebrated as living a feminist life. Since her work was figural in nature, it fit well within the focus of FAM, which aimed to "organize annual exhibitions that featured the work of female artists from different countries and stylistic movements'."[citation needed]

Since her death, Marval's work has been exhibited many times, most often in France. A full list of exhibitions has been compiled on the website jacqueline-marval.com 29 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine. In 2020-21, she was included in the exhibition Valadon et ses contemporaines at the Musée des beaux-arts de limoges, which was also on view at the Monstaère Royal de Brou from 13 March 2021 – 27 June 2021.[13]

The Papillon Gallery wrote that "Marval's paintings are provocative and edgy, challenging and unusual, she was an important modernist at the earliest moments of the movement."[17]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Perry, Gill (1995). Women artists and the Parisian avant-garde : modernism and "feminine" art, 1900 to the late 1920s. Manchester: Manchester Univ. Press. pp. 2, 10, 19, 20, 34, 39, 41, 45, 78 (n.8), 87, 89, 93, 140, 147, 156–7. ISBN 978-0-7190-4164-8. OCLC 832573343 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d Birnbaum, Paula J (2016). Women Artists in Interwar France: Framing Femininities. Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-138-27546-1. OCLC 1223290241.[page needed]
  3. ^ a b c Gersh-Nesic, Beth (7 April 2020). "The Marvelous Madame Marval: A Woman Artist Among the Fauves". Bonjour Paris. Archived from the original on 19 August 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  4. ^ Geyer, Andrea (16 October 2015). "REVOLT, THEY SAID" (PDF). MOMA.org. p. 78. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Biography". Jacqueline Marval. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d "Marval, Jacqueline". Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford University Press. 31 October 2011. doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.b00118008.
  7. ^ Petteys, Chris (1985). "MAHVAL, JACQUELINE, (pseudonym for MARIE JOSEPHINE VALLET)". Dictionary of Women Artists: An International Dictionary of Women Artists Born Before 1900. Boston, Mass.: G.K. Hall. p. 480. ISBN 978-0-8161-8456-9. OCLC 566008822 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ a b Beechey, James (2001). "Jules Flandrin. Oxford". The Burlington Magazine. 143 (1180). The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.: 440–441. ISSN 0007-6287. JSTOR 889111. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  9. ^ Roussier, François (2008). Jacqueline Marval 1866-1932. Thalia édition. pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-2-35278-040-3. OCLC 758447941.
  10. ^ Bellow, Juliet (2012). Modernism on stage : the Ballets Russes and the Parisian avant-garde. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4094-0911-3. OCLC 855360857.
  11. ^ "Portrait of Dolly Davis". Milwaukee Art Museum. 8 April 2022. Archived from the original on 16 March 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2024. The MAM link may not work in Firefox; use archive link instead.
  12. ^ a b Apollinaire, Guillaume (1972). "Art News: Women Painters". In Breunig, LeRoy C. (ed.). Apollinaire on art: essays and reviews, 1902-1918. Translated by Suleiman, Susan Rubin. New York: Viking Press. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-670-12960-7. OCLC 286117 – via Internet Archive.
  13. ^ a b . Jacqueline Marval. Archived from the original on 29 April 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  14. ^ . The Armory Show at 100. 6 February 2013. Archived from the original on 17 April 2021.
  15. ^ Brown, Milton W. (1988). The Story of the Armory Show (2nd ed.). New York: Abbeville Press. p. 291. ISBN 978-0-89659-795-2. OCLC 17233619 – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ D., R. E. (April 1911). "Art in France". The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs. 19 (97). The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.: 61–62. ISSN 0951-0788. JSTOR 858653. Retrieved 15 March 2024.

Further reading edit

  • Gonnard, Catherine; Lebovici, Élisabeth (2007). femmes artistes: artistes femmes: Paris, de 1800 à nos jours [women artists: artist women: Paris, from 1800 to today] (in French). Paris: Éditions Hazan. pp. 67–68. ISBN 978-2-7541-0206-3. OCLC 501418759.
  • Roussier, François (2008) [1987]. Jacqueline Marval: 1866-1932 (in French). Paris: Thalia Édition. ISBN 978-2-35278-040-3. OCLC 1423856150.
  • Wantellet, Maurice (2003) [1987]. Le Dauphiné et les peintres: une source d'inspiration [The Dauphiné and the painters: a source of inspiration] (in French). Grenoble, Veurey, FR: Musée dauphinois. ISBN 978-2-911739-49-1. OCLC 417156051.
  • Wantellet, Maurice (1987). Deux siècles, et plus, de peinture dauphinoise [Two centuries and more of Dauphinoise painting] (in French). Grenoble: Selbstverlag. p. 269. ISBN 978-2-9502223-0-5. OCLC 20130906, 1254801934.

External links edit

  • Andry-Farcy (15 January 2006). [Jacqueline Marval: the life of a great artist]. jacqueline-marval.com (in French). Archived from the original on 7 January 2009.
  • Official website   (in French and English)

jacqueline, marval, pseudonym, marie, josephine, vallet, october, 1866, 1932, french, painter, lithographer, sculptor, portrait, jules, flandrin, 1907, bornmarie, josephine, vallet, 1866, october, 1866quaix, chartreuse, francedied19, 1932, 1932, aged, paris, f. Jacqueline Marval was the pseudonym for Marie Josephine Vallet 19 October 1866 28 May 1932 who was a French painter lithographer and sculptor 1 Jacqueline MarvalPortrait by Jules Flandrin 1907 BornMarie Josephine Vallet 1866 10 19 19 October 1866Quaix en Chartreuse FranceDied19 May 1932 1932 05 19 aged 65 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchKnown forPaintingSpouseAlbert Valentin m 1886 d 1891 Partner s Francois Joseph Girot Jules FlandrinWebsitewww wbr jacqueline marval wbr com Contents 1 Early life 2 Career as an artist 3 Les Odalisques 1902 03 4 Critical reception and legacy 5 Gallery 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editVallet was born in Quaix en Chartreuse into a family of school teachers 2 She was married in 1866 to a traveling salesperson Albert Valentin but separated from her husband in 1891 after the death of her son 1 She moved to Grenoble and worked as a seamstress sewing waistcoats 3 before moving to Paris in 1900 4 It was in 1900 when Vallet took on the pseudonym Jacqueline Marval Marval being the composite of her first and last name MARie VALlet 5 Career as an artist edit nbsp Marval in her apartment Paris circa 1925 In 1894 Marval met the painter Francois Joseph Girot fr and began living with him in Paris where she was introduced to Les Nabis group 6 Girot introduced her to Jules Flandrin another painter and a student of Gustave Moreau The two fell in love and Marval left Girot to move in with Flandrin in Rue Campagne Premiere in the Montparnasse area She would live with him as his companion for 20 years 7 As an artist Marval worked primarily as a painter however she also made lithographs watercolours pastels engravings tapestry designs and experimented with sculpture 6 Vallet s first works were rejected from the 1900 Salon des Independants but she succeeded in having a dozen paintings shown in that exhibition the following year in 1901 The works rejected in 1900 were bought by the art dealer Ambroise Vollard who continued to support her work 1 Between 1901 and 1905 Marval worked frequently alongside Henri Matisse Albert Marquet and Flandrin and the four influenced each other 8 In 1902 several of her paintings were displayed alongside works by Flandrin Albert Marquet and Henri Matisse in a gallery in Rue Victor Masse curated by Berthe Weill who was particularly interested in promoting the works of female artists living in Paris 1 Marval also exhibited in the first Salon d Automne in 1902 where she showed her large scale painting Les Odalisques 1 In 1913 Marval was chosen by a jury made up of Gabriel Astruc the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle and the painters Maurice Denis and Edouard Vuillard to decorate the foyer of the new Theatre des Champs Elysees She created a series of twelve paintings on the theme of Daphnis and Chloe 9 The series was based on the Ballets Russes production of Daphnis et Chloe performed the year prior 10 Also in 1913 Marval protested against the removal from the Salon d Automne of Kees van Dongen s The Spanish Shawl and became friends with Van Dongen setting up her studio near his Marval and Flandrin moved into 40 rue Denfert Rochereau which was next door to Van Dongen in 1914 1 She attended his famous costumed ball in 1914 1 Marval s works began to be recognized across Europe and beyond she exhibited in Barcelona Liege Venice Zurich Budapest and Kyoto 6 Beginning in 1923 Marval was active in favor of the creation of modern art museums in Paris and Grenoble Towards the end of her life she fell into poverty 3 Marval died of cancer at the Hopital Bichat in Paris in 1932 1 3 After her death her works were held in the Galerie Druet before it was closed in 1938 and they were sold Her painting Portrait of Dolly Davis 1925 is in the collection of the Milwaukee Art Museum 11 Les Odalisques 1902 03 edit nbsp The Odalisques 1902 1903 Museum of Grenoble Perhaps her most famous work Les Odalisques was made in 1902 03 and was first exhibited at the Salon des Independants in 1903 This painting depicts five women three seated nude one dressed and reclining on her elbow and one standing clothed and holding a tray Les odalisques follows in the art historical tradition of large scale orientalized bathing scenes with a strong focus on the nude body and interaction between figures original research Guillaume Apollinaire was struck by this work and wrote in Chronique des arts in 1912 that Mme Marval has given the measure of her talent and has achieved a work of importance for modern painting This strong and sensual work freely painted and wholly personal in composition line and coloring deserves to survive 12 Les Odalisques now resides within the collection of the Musee de Grenoble and was last exhibited at the Musee Paul Dini in 2018 13 Les Odalisques was not included in the historic 1913 Armory Show as is frequently noted in literature on the artist Instead a different work by Marval Odalisques au miroir 1911 was shown at the Armory Show after an invitation by Vollard 14 15 Marval exhibited in the United States a number of additional times after the Armory Show 5 Critical reception and legacy editCritics gave Marval high praise during her career In a 1911 issue of The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs for example it was written that at an exhibition at the Druet Gallery The paintings of Madame Marval were among the most striking 16 Apollinaire aside from his compliments to Les Odalisques more generally makes comments on her work that refer to it as exciting strong and worthy of recognition 12 Some critics referred to her as a Fauve a reflection of her choice of palette which was heavily influenced by Fauve and Impressionist painters who came before her 6 According to Lucien Manissieux a student of Flandrin Marquet Flandrin Matisse all awaited each work she produced with curiosity and emotion and there is some evidence that her male peers borrowed from her brilliant colour and formal economy of her painting 8 During her lifetime Marval refused to exhibit in all female exhibitions yet after her death her career and work was celebrated in one 2 The Societe des Femmes Artistes Modernes FAM was a women artists collective in Paris FAM was headed by Marie Anne Camax Zoegger 1887 1952 a bourgeois French Catholic woman 2 They put on a retrospective of Marval s work in 1933 as part of their annual exhibition 2 Marval who did not identify as a feminist was appropriated by FAM as one and has since been celebrated as living a feminist life Since her work was figural in nature it fit well within the focus of FAM which aimed to organize annual exhibitions that featured the work of female artists from different countries and stylistic movements citation needed Since her death Marval s work has been exhibited many times most often in France A full list of exhibitions has been compiled on the website jacqueline marval com Archived 29 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine In 2020 21 she was included in the exhibition Valadon et ses contemporaines at the Musee des beaux arts de limoges which was also on view at the Monstaere Royal de Brou from 13 March 2021 27 June 2021 13 The Papillon Gallery wrote that Marval s paintings are provocative and edgy challenging and unusual she was an important modernist at the earliest moments of the movement 17 Gallery edit nbsp Self portrait 1900 nbsp L Odalisque au guepard 1900 nbsp Les Coquettes 1903 oil on canvas Ancienne Collection Ambroise Vollard nbsp Les trois roses 1911 nbsp Portrait de femme 1912 nbsp La bise d automne 1914 nbsp The Bohemian 1921 nbsp La grande plage a Biarritz 1923 References edit a b c d e f g h Perry Gill 1995 Women artists and the Parisian avant garde modernism and feminine art 1900 to the late 1920s Manchester Manchester Univ Press pp 2 10 19 20 34 39 41 45 78 n 8 87 89 93 140 147 156 7 ISBN 978 0 7190 4164 8 OCLC 832573343 via Internet Archive a b c d Birnbaum Paula J 2016 Women Artists in Interwar France Framing Femininities Farnham Surrey UK Ashgate ISBN 978 1 138 27546 1 OCLC 1223290241 page needed a b c Gersh Nesic Beth 7 April 2020 The Marvelous Madame Marval A Woman Artist Among the Fauves Bonjour Paris Archived from the original on 19 August 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2024 Geyer Andrea 16 October 2015 REVOLT THEY SAID PDF MOMA org p 78 Retrieved 15 March 2024 a b Biography Jacqueline Marval Retrieved 24 March 2021 a b c d Marval Jacqueline Benezit Dictionary of Artists Oxford University Press 31 October 2011 doi 10 1093 benz 9780199773787 article b00118008 Petteys Chris 1985 MAHVAL JACQUELINE pseudonym for MARIE JOSEPHINE VALLET Dictionary of Women Artists An International Dictionary of Women Artists Born Before 1900 Boston Mass G K Hall p 480 ISBN 978 0 8161 8456 9 OCLC 566008822 via Internet Archive a b Beechey James 2001 Jules Flandrin Oxford The Burlington Magazine 143 1180 The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd 440 441 ISSN 0007 6287 JSTOR 889111 Retrieved 15 March 2024 Roussier Francois 2008 Jacqueline Marval 1866 1932 Thalia edition pp 140 141 ISBN 978 2 35278 040 3 OCLC 758447941 Bellow Juliet 2012 Modernism on stage the Ballets Russes and the Parisian avant garde Farnham Surrey Ashgate ISBN 978 1 4094 0911 3 OCLC 855360857 Portrait of Dolly Davis Milwaukee Art Museum 8 April 2022 Archived from the original on 16 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2024 The MAM link may not work in Firefox use archive link instead a b Apollinaire Guillaume 1972 Art News Women Painters In Breunig LeRoy C ed Apollinaire on art essays and reviews 1902 1918 Translated by Suleiman Susan Rubin New York Viking Press p 229 ISBN 978 0 670 12960 7 OCLC 286117 via Internet Archive a b Exhibitions Jacqueline Marval Archived from the original on 29 April 2021 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Armory Show 1913 Complete List The Armory Show at 100 6 February 2013 Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Brown Milton W 1988 The Story of the Armory Show 2nd ed New York Abbeville Press p 291 ISBN 978 0 89659 795 2 OCLC 17233619 via Internet Archive D R E April 1911 Art in France The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 19 97 The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd 61 62 ISSN 0951 0788 JSTOR 858653 Retrieved 15 March 2024 Jacqueline Marval Papillon Gallery Retrieved 15 March 2024 Further reading editGonnard Catherine Lebovici Elisabeth 2007 femmes artistes artistes femmes Paris de 1800 a nos jours women artists artist women Paris from 1800 to today in French Paris Editions Hazan pp 67 68 ISBN 978 2 7541 0206 3 OCLC 501418759 Roussier Francois 2008 1987 Jacqueline Marval 1866 1932 in French Paris Thalia Edition ISBN 978 2 35278 040 3 OCLC 1423856150 Wantellet Maurice 2003 1987 Le Dauphine et les peintres une source d inspiration The Dauphine and the painters a source of inspiration in French Grenoble Veurey FR Musee dauphinois ISBN 978 2 911739 49 1 OCLC 417156051 Wantellet Maurice 1987 Deux siecles et plus de peinture dauphinoise Two centuries and more of Dauphinoise painting in French Grenoble Selbstverlag p 269 ISBN 978 2 9502223 0 5 OCLC 20130906 1254801934 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jacqueline Marval Andry Farcy 15 January 2006 Jacqueline Marval la vie d une grande artiste Jacqueline Marval the life of a great artist jacqueline marval com in French Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Official website nbsp in French and English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacqueline Marval amp oldid 1214432691, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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