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Niki de Saint Phalle

Niki de Saint Phalle (French pronunciation: [niki d(ə) sɛ̃ fal]; born Catherine Marie-Agnès Fal de Saint Phalle;[1] 29 October 1930 – 21 May 2002) was a French-American[5][6] sculptor, painter, filmmaker, and author of colorful hand-illustrated books. Widely noted as one of the few female monumental sculptors,[7] Saint Phalle was also known for her social commitment and work.[8][9]

Niki de Saint Phalle
1970 portrait by Lothar Wolleh
Born
Catherine Marie-Agnès Fal de Saint Phalle[1]

(1930-10-29)29 October 1930
Died21 May 2002(2002-05-21) (aged 71)
La Jolla, California, United States
NationalityFrench, American, Swiss[2]
EducationSelf-taught in art[3]
Known forSculpture, painting, filmmaking
Notable workNanas
Tarot Garden
StyleNouveau réalisme, Feminist art
Spouse(s)
(m. 1949; div. 1961)
[4]
(m. 1971; died 1991)
AwardsPrix Caran d’Ache (1994)
Praemium Imperiale (2000)
Patron(s)Agnelli family
Websitenikidesaintphalle.org

Her career was divided into two major phases: feminist wrath, expressed via and.22 guns shot at plaster sculptures inside which she had hidden bags of wet paint, and feminist celebration of femininity through sculptures of female bodies in fibreglass and polyester resin, which were frequently enormous.[10]

She had a difficult and traumatic childhood and a much-disrupted education, which she wrote about many decades later. After an early marriage and two children, she began creating art in a naïve, experimental style. She first received worldwide attention for angry, violent assemblages which had been shot by firearms. These evolved into Nanas, light-hearted, whimsical, colorful, large-scale sculptures of animals, monsters, and female figures. Her most comprehensive work was the Tarot Garden, a large sculpture garden containing numerous works ranging up to house-sized creations.

Saint Phalle's idiosyncratic style has been called "outsider art"; she had no formal training in art,[3] but associated freely with many other contemporary artists, writers, and composers.[11] Her books and abundant correspondence were written and brightly-colored in a childish style, but throughout her lifetime she addressed many controversial and important global problems in the bold way which children often question and call out unacceptable neglect.[9]

Throughout her creative career, she collaborated with other well-known artists such as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Larry Rivers, composer John Cage, and architect Mario Botta, as well as dozens of less-known artists and craftspersons. For several decades, she worked especially closely with Swiss kinetic artist Jean Tinguely, who also became her second husband. In her later years, she suffered from multiple chronic health problems attributed to repeated exposure to airborne glass fibers and petrochemical fumes from the experimental materials she had used in her pioneering artworks, but she continued to create prolifically until the end of her life.

A critic has observed that Saint Phalle's "insistence on exuberance, emotion and sensuality, her pursuit of the figurative and her bold use of color have not endeared her to everyone in a minimalist age".[12] She was well known in Europe,[12] but her work was little-seen in the US, until her final years in San Diego. Another critic said: "The French-born, American-raised artist is one of the most significant female and feminist artists of the 20th century, and one of the few to receive recognition in the male-dominated art world during her lifetime".[13]

Early life and education (1930–1948) edit

Catherine Marie-Agnès Fal de Saint Phalle was born on October 29, 1930, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, near Paris.[1][14] Her father was Count André-Marie de Saint Phalle (1906–1967), a French banker, and her mother was an American, named Jeanne Jacqueline Harper (1908–1980).[15][16][Note 1] Marie-Agnès was the second of five children,[1] and her cousins included the French novelist Thérèse de Saint Phalle (Baroness Jehan de Drouas),[citation needed] her double cousin,[17] daughter of Count Alexandre de Saint Phalle (brother of Count André-Marie) and his wife Helene Georgia Harper (sister of Jeanne Jacqueline).[18][19] Another cousin was the American-born investment banker, lawyer, and former Office of Strategic Services agent Thibaut de Saint Phalle, who served in the Carter administration as a director of the Export–Import Bank of the United States (1977-1981).[17][20]

Marie-Agnès was born one year after Black Tuesday, and the French economy was also suffering in the aftermath of the infamous stock market crash that initiated the Great Depression.[21] Within months of her birth, her father's finance company closed, and her parents moved with her oldest brother to the suburbs of New York City; she was left with her maternal grandparents in Nièvre, near the geographical center of France.[21] Around 1933, she rejoined her parents in Greenwich, Connecticut; her father had found work as manager of the American branch of the Saint Phalle family's bank.[11] In 1937, the family moved to East 88th Street and Park Avenue[22] in the affluent Upper East Side neighborhood of New York City.[12][14] By this time, Marie-Agnès was known as "Niki", the name she would use from then on.[14]

Niki grew up in a strict Catholic environment, against which she repeatedly rebelled.[23] Her mother was temperamental and violent, beating the younger children, and forcing them to eat even if they were not hungry.[21] Both of her younger siblings, Elizabeth and Richard de Saint Phalle, would later commit suicide as adults.[21][10] The atmosphere at home was tense; the only place where Niki felt comfortable and warm was in the kitchen, overseen by a black cook.[24]: 74  Decades later, Niki would reveal that she had suffered years of sexual abuse from her father, starting at the age of 11.[23][25][12][24]: 74  She would later refer to the environment where she grew up as enfer ("hell").[26]

She spent most of her childhood and adolescence in New York City, and summers in Connecticut or Long Island.[22] She frequently returned to France to visit relatives,[1] becoming fluent in both French and American English.[12] In 1937, she attended school at the Convent of the Sacred Heart on East 91st Street in Manhattan. After she was expelled in 1941, she rejoined her maternal grandparents, who had moved to Princeton, New Jersey, and she briefly attended the public school there.[14]

She returned to the Upper East Side and studied there at the Brearley School from 1942 to 1944.[23] There, she met Jackie Matisse, granddaughter of artist Henri Matisse; they would become lifelong friends.[22] However, Saint Phalle was dismissed for painting in red the fig leaves on the school's classical statuary.[27][21][14][28] Despite this, she would later say it was there “[that] I became a feminist. They inculcated in us that women can and must accomplish great things.”[23][22] She was then enrolled in a convent school in Suffern, New York,[21] but was expelled.[29] She finally graduated from the Oldfields School in Glencoe, Maryland in 1947.[14]

During her late teenage years, Saint Phalle became a fashion model; at the age of 18, she appeared on the cover of Life (26 September 1949)[30] and, three years later, on the November 1952 cover of French Vogue.[30][1] She also appeared in the pages of Elle[31] and Harper's Bazaar.

"At one point,[when?] Gloria Steinem spotted Saint Phalle walking down Fifty-seventh Street, purseless and in a cowboy getup. In an interview quoted by the show’s curator, Ruba Katrib, in the catalogue, Steinem recalled thinking, 'That is the first free woman I have ever seen in real life. I want to be just like her.'"[10]

First marriage and children (1949–1960) edit

 
Niki de Saint Phalle in 1964
 
Parts of Le Paradis Fantastique (1967–1971), an early collaboration of Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely

At the age of 18, Saint Phalle married Harry Mathews, whom she had first met at the age of 11 (he was 12) through her father.[21][23][24]: 91  Six years later, they again encountered each other by chance on a train to Princeton, and soon became a couple.[24]: 91  Initially, they had a civil ceremony on 6 June 1949 in New York City Hall.[24]: 91  At the urging of Niki's mother, they also had a religious rite at the French Church of New York the following February.[14][24]: 91 

Although her parents accepted the union, her husband's family objected to her Catholic background and cut them off financially, causing them to resort to occasional shoplifting.[21] They moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts so Mathews could study music at Harvard University.[21][14] Saint Phalle began to paint in oils and gouaches but aimed to pursue a career in acting.[32][14] Their first child, Laura, was born in April 1951. In 1952, the small family moved to Paris, where Harry continued his studies in conducting at I’Ecole Normale de Musique.[14] The new parents were casual, even negligent in their care,[24]: 93 [21] but their children would benefit from better financial circumstances after Mathews received an inheritance.[21]

Saint Phalle rejected the staid, conservative values of her family, which dictated domestic positions for wives and particular strict rules of conduct.[23] Poet John Ashbery recalled that Saint Phalle's artistic pursuits were rejected in turn by relatives: her uncle "French banker Count Alexandre de Saint-Phalle, ... reportedly takes a dim view of her artistic activities", Ashbery observed.[Note 2] However, after marrying young and becoming a mother, she found herself living the same bourgeois lifestyle that she had attempted to escape.[11]

For about a decade, the family would wander around France and Europe, living a bohemian lifestyle. In Nice, Saint Phalle and Mathews would have separate affairs in 1953; after she attacked her husband's mistress, she took an overdose of sleeping pills, but they had little effect because she was manic at the time.[21] When Harry discovered a stash of knives, razors, and scissors under a mattress, he took his wife to a mental clinic in Nice, where she was treated with electroshock therapy and insulin shock therapy.[23][21] Liberated from routine household work, she focused on creating artwork instead and improved enough to be discharged in six weeks.[21] Around the same time, her husband abandoned his music studies and started to write his first novel, eventually switching to a career in writing.[14]

While in Paris on a modeling assignment in 1954, Saint Phalle was introduced to the American-French painter Hugh Weiss [fr], who became both her friend and artistic mentor. He encouraged her to continue painting in her self-taught style.[14][11]

In September 1954, the small family moved to Deià, Majorca, Spain, where her son Philip was born in May 1955.[24]: 93 [21][14] While in Spain, Saint Phalle read the works of Proust and visited Madrid and Barcelona, where she became deeply affected by the work of architect Antoni Gaudí.[33] Gaudí's influence opened many previously unimagined possibilities for Saint Phalle, especially the use of unusual materials and objets-trouvés as structural elements in sculpture and architecture. Saint Phalle was particularly struck by Gaudí's "Park Güell" which would inspire her to one day create her own garden-based artwork that would combine artistic and natural elements.

Saint Phalle continued to paint, particularly after she and her family moved to Paris in the mid-1950s. Her first art exhibition was held in 1956 in Switzerland, where she displayed her naïve style of oil painting.[14]

In 1956, she met the Swiss artist Jean Tinguely and his wife, artist Eva Aeppli. Saint Phalle attempted her first large-scale sculpture, enlisting Tinguely to make an iron armature, which she covered with plaster and paint.[14]

In the late 1950s, Saint Phalle became ill with hyperthyroidism and tachycardia, which were eventually treated by an operation in 1958.[34]

In 1959, Saint Phalle first encountered multiple artworks by Yves Klein, Marcel Duchamp, Daniel Spoerri, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jasper Johns. Seeing these avant-garde works triggered her "first great artistic crisis".[24]: 42  She switched from oil painting to gouaches and gloss paint, and began to produce assemblages from household objects and castoffs.[24]: 42  By this time, she had decided to dedicate herself fully to creating art, free from the obligations of everyday family life.[24]: 75–76 

In 1960, she and Harry separated by mutual agreement, and her husband moved to another apartment with their two children.[24]: 93 [21][14] At that time, her daughter Laura was nine, and her son Philip was five years old.[24]: 75  Mathews would occasionally buy artworks from his wife as a way of providing her modest support, and she would visit him and the children periodically.[24]: 93 

She soon moved in with Jean Tinguely, who by then had separated from his own wife, Eva Aeppli.[24]: 95 [35] He was becoming well known for his kinetic sculptures made from cast-off mechanisms and junk. In many ways, the pair were opposites, and sometimes had violent disagreements, and frequent affairs with others.[24]: 95–98 [12] They would live together intermittently and collaborate closely on artistic projects for over a decade before marrying in 1971.[21][7][36] Two years later they separated, but remained on good terms and continued to collaborate on various projects up through Tinguely's death in 1991.[7][27]

In 1960, Tinguely introduced her to Pontus Hultén, then the director of the Moderna Museet (Modern Museum) in Stockholm, Sweden. Over the next few years, he would invite her to participate in important exhibitions, and acquire her artworks for the museum.[14] He would later become the first director of the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris (1974–1981), where he continued to be influential in promoting wider recognition of Saint Phalle's artwork.

Tirs (1961–1963) edit

 
Autel d'or ("Golden Altar", 1962) resembles smaller versions of the Tirs series, but was not shot or paint-splattered

Saint Phalle created a series of works in the early 1960s she called Tirs ("Shootings" or "Shots"). The series began as "target pictures", with painted bullseye targets prominently displayed within her painted collages, such as Saint Sébastien (Portrait of My Lover / Portrait of My Beloved / Martyr nécessaire) (1961),[30] or Assemblage (Figure with Dartboard Head) (1962).[37] She would invite viewers to throw darts at the dartboards embedded as faces in her figurative assemblages, which were influenced by the targets painted by her friend Jasper Johns.[38]

Soon, she would start by embedding knives, razor blades, scissors, eggbeaters, baby-doll arms, and other household items in plaster covering a large board, along with bags filled with colorful paints, cans of spray paint, and sometimes tomato.[21] Also, she might suspend bags of paint or cans of spray paint in front of the white-painted assemblage. She would then repeatedly shoot the assemblage with a pistol, rifle, or miniature cannon, causing the liquids to "bleed" or to spray out.[35][21][24]: 44 

Her first staged public shooting event was in February 1961, attended by Jean Tinguely, Daniel Spoerri, and Pierre Restany, among others.[38] Her early art performance/events took place in the "Impasse Ronsin", a trash-strewn back alley in the Montparnasse district of Paris. It was the site of the improvised studios of Constantin Brâncuși, Jean Tinguely, Yves Klein, Max Ernst, Les Lalanne, and other experimental artists in the 1950s and 1960s.[39]

As founder of the Nouveau réalisme ("New Realist") movement, Restany asked Saint Phalle to join this group of French artists upon seeing her performance; she would become the only female member of this group.[38][21]

The extreme expressions of violence attracted media attention, catapulting Saint Phalle into the ranks of avant-garde artistic rebellion.[3] The Tirs combined performance, body art, sculpture, and painting, in the artistic ferment of the 1960s.[6] Saint Phalle began to present variations on this process in art museums and galleries, and recruited other artists to join in staged public "happenings", where some of her colleagues would also pull the trigger. At American performances, she would meet many other emerging artists, including Robert Rauschenberg, Ad Reinhardt, Frank Stella, and Ed Kienholz.[38] She also organized indoors events at art galleries, where she would invite visitors to shoot at her assemblages.[14]

Saint Phalle participated in Spoerri's "Edition MAT" (Multiplication d’Art Transformable) program of multiple artwork editions, supplying simpler versions of her Tirs works, with detailed instructions on how to shoot them with a .22 rifle.[38] Saint Phalle carefully documented her artistic process in the Tirs with writing, still photos, and films.[38] She would attach common readymade artifacts to a board, attach bags of colorful paint, whitewash everything, and then dip the assemblage into milk-white plaster.[38] Once it had dried, the collection was ready for shooting by a purchaser.

In June 1961, Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely joined Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg in a concert-happening called Variations II, orchestrated by avant-garde American composer John Cage, and held at the American Embassy in Paris. While David Tudor played Cage compositions on the piano, the artists created their works of art on stage as the audience watched the proceedings.[38][14]

In August 1961, Marcel Duchamp introduced Saint Phalle and Tinguely to Salvador Dalí, who invited them to create a life-sized exploding bull with fireworks (Toro de Fuego). This Homenage a Dalí ("Homage to Dalí") was wheeled out after the end of a traditional Spanish bullfight, in Figueras, Catalonia, Spain, and exploded in front of the audience.[24]: 27 [35][27][14]

In 1962, she had her first one-woman show in New York City, at the gallery run by Alexander Iolas.[22][40] It included Homage to Le Facteur Cheval, a shooting gallery where visitors could fire on one of her Tirs installations.[22][40] This began her long working relationship with the gallerist, eventually comprising at least 17 exhibitions of her work.[22]

An exclusive 1962 open-air shooting event in the Malibu Hills above Los Angeles was attended by Hollywood celebrities, including Jane Fonda and John Houseman.[41] Attendees from the art world included John Cage, Ed Ruscha, and Leo Castelli, while Ed Kienholz helped to manage the firearms.[42]

In most of these public performances, Saint Phalle was impeccably dressed in a fashionable white pantsuit.[24]: 45 

By 1963, she had taken the series to galleries in New York City and Los Angeles, inviting the public to participate in the shootings. In Los Angeles, she shot a large-scale King Kong assemblage she had constructed, paint-splattering the embedded sculpted faces of politicians such as John F Kennedy, Fidel Castro, and Charles De Gaulle, with Santa Claus and Donald Duck as well.[41] This work would later be acquired by the Moderna Museet in Stockholm,[30] and would mark her transition to a new series of fantastic monsters, animals, and female figures.[14][24]: 47  Throughout her career, snakes, birds, and dragons would become recurring symbols in her artworks.[13][43]

While in New York City, Saint Phalle and Tinguely stayed in the Hotel Chelsea in 1962, and again in 1964-1965.[22] In 1963, the couple purchased an old hotel, called Auberge au Cheval Blanc ("White Horse Inn"), in Soisy-sur-Ecole, 44 kilometres (27 mi) southeast of Paris.[12][14] It had previously been a hotel, a café, a cinema, and even a brothel,[12] but the new owners converted it into artistic studios which they would share over the decades to come.

Nanas (1964–1973) edit

 
Saint Phalle in her first figurative survey museum exhibition Les Nanas au pouvoir, at Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (1967)
 
Gwendolyn 2 (1966/1990)
 
Le poète et sa muse ("Poet and his Muse", 1978)
 
Blue Nana (2000)
 
Nana Dansante (jaune) ("Dancing Nana (Yellow)")
 
A black Nana

Saint Phalle next explored the various roles of women, in what would develop into her best-known and most prolific series of sculptures.[3] She started making life-size dolls of women, such as brides and mothers giving birth, monsters, and large heads. Initially, they were made of soft materials, such as wool, cloth, and papier-mâché, but they soon evolved into plaster over a wire framework and plastic toys, some painted all white.[14][6]

As the series developed into larger monumental works, Saint Phalle used composite fiberglass-reinforced polyester plastic (also known as FRP or GRP) decorated with multiple bright-colored acrylic or polyester paints. She also used polyurethane foam in many of her early sculptures.[44] These innovative materials enabled the construction of colorful, large-scale sculptures with new ease and fluidity of form. Saint Phalle unknowingly used dangerous fabrication and painting processes that released airborne glass fibers and chemicals, including styrene, epoxy, and toxic solvents.[45][24]: 57 

In 1963–64, she created a series of sculptures protesting stereotypical societal roles for women, as child bearers, devouring mothers, witches, and prostitutes.[14] Some of her early artworks from this Bride period depicted ghostly, skeletal brides dressed in white,[46] which have been compared to Miss Havisham, an ethereal character in Charles Dickens' novel Great Expectations.[47]

Over time, these figures became more joyful, whimsical, colorful, and larger in scale.[26] Inspired by a collaborative drawing with American artist Larry Rivers of his wife, her pregnant friend Clarice Price, Saint Phalle began to portray archetypal female figures with a more optimistic view of the position of women in society.[48][28][21] Gwendoline (1965) was the first major sculpture in what would become a lifetime series of these works.[49]

The newer figures took on ecstatic dance poses[49] and even acrobatic positions, such as handstands and cartwheels. Saint Phalle's light-hearted figures have been compared to the joyful dancers of Matisse and the sturdy female figures by Gaston Lachaise, Aristide Maillol, and Rodin.[23]

By 1965, she was calling her artistic expressions of the proverbial everywoman Nanas, after a French slang word that is roughly equivalent to "broad",[28] or "chick".[3][33] The term also recalls the childish French taunt nananère.[50]: 37 

The first of these freely-posed forms, made of papier-mâché, yarn, and cloth, were exhibited at the Alexander Iolas Gallery in Paris in September 1965. During this show, she joined a type of tombola raffle organized by the Artist's Club of New York, whereby artworks were randomly left in coin-operated luggage lockers at Pennsylvania Station, and keys were offered for $10 each.[51]

For this show, Iolas also published Saint Phalle's first artist book[49] that included her handwritten text in combination with her drawings of Bananas.[51] Encouraged by Iolas, she started a highly productive output of graphics work that accompanied her exhibitions, which included silk-screened prints, posters, books, and writings.[14] In the years to come, she would publish multiple hand-lettered books, profusely illustrated with colorful drawings and diagrams, on topics such as AIDS prevention and various periods in her life story.[14]

In 1966, Saint Phalle collaborated with Jean Tinguely and Per Olof Ultvedt on a temporary indoor sculpture installation, Hon – en katedral (which means "She-a-Cathedral" in Swedish),[50]: 30  filling a large temporary gallery in the Moderna Museet, in Stockholm, Sweden. During construction, Saint Phalle recruited Swiss art student Rico Weber [de], who had been working as a dishwasher in the museum restaurant[52] (in the following years, he would become a vital assistant and collaborator for both Saint Phalle and Tinguely).[52] A team of 8 people worked strenuously for 40 days, first building a frame using metal rebar, covering it with chicken wire, sheathing it with fabric attached with smelly animal glue, and then painting the inside of the enclosure black, and painting the outside in bright colors.[52] The final structure was 82 feet (25 m) long and 30 feet (9.1 m) wide, weighing around 6 tonnes (6,000 kg). In the tabloid-sized newsprint catalog published for the show, Saint Phalle included a diagram showing the artistic influences on her design, which included Simon Rodia's Watts Towers, Ferdinand Cheval's Le Palais Idéal, and the architecture of Antoni Gaudi.[50]: 32 

The outer form was a giant, reclining sculpture of a pregnant woman (a Nana), whose voluminous interior could be entered through a door-sized vaginal opening between her legs.[53] Written on one of Hon's massive thighs was the motto Honi soit qui mal y pense ("May he be shamed who thinks badly of it").[24]: 59 [50]: 37  Inside the massive sculpture were a 12-seat cinema theater, a milk bar inside a breast, a fish pond, and a brain built by Tinguely, with moving mechanical parts.[21][27] In addition, the sprawling Nana contained a coin telephone, a love-seat sofa, a museum of fake paintings, a sandwich vending machine, an art installation by Ultvedt, and a playground slide for children.[52]

After an initial shocked silence, the installation elicited extensive public commentary in magazines and newspapers throughout the world, raising awareness of the Moderna Museet.[52] Over 100,000 visitors crowded in to experience the immersive environment, including many children.[24]: 26, 59 [52] At the end of 3 months, the entire temporary setup was demolished and removed, except for the head, which was preserved by the museum in its permanent collection.[52] Some small fragments were attached to limited-edition exhibition catalogs and sold as mementos.[52]

Around this time, Saint Phalle also designed stage sets and costumes for theatrical productions: Éloge de La Folie ("Praise of the Madness", 1966), a ballet by Roland Petit; an adaptation of the Aristophanes play Lysistrata (1966); and a German-language play she co-wrote with Rainer von Diez [fr] titled ICH (All About Me) (1968).[54][51][14] Large fixed or moveable Nana figures were prominent in several of these productions.[24]: 59 

In 1967, Saint Phalle began working with polyester resin,[53] a material which could be shaped easily but would transform into a hard, smooth, weather-resistant surface. This new technology enabled her to construct large, fantastical figures for display outdoors in public spaces and parks.[24]: 57  The material is reasonably durable outdoors (similar materials are used for boats and car bodies), although decades of weather exposure can eventually cause deterioration, requiring specialized art conservation measures.[55]

In August 1967, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam opened Saint Phalle's first retrospective exhibition, Les Nanas au pouvoir ("Nana Power"). For the show, Niki created her first "Nana Dream House" and "Nana Fountain", and also showed plans for her first "Nana Town".[14]

In 1967, she exhibited Le Paradis Fantastique ("The Fantastic Paradise"), a collaborative grouping of nine of her sculptures with six machines built by Tinguely, on the rooftop terrace of the 8-level French Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal.[56][57] The composition was originally conceived of as an attack by Tinguely's dark mechanical constructions upon Saint Phalle's brightly-colored animals and female figures, a kind of "amorous warfare".[58][24]: 100 

Although the French Pavilion itself was popular, most visitors did not see the rooftop terrace where the sculptures were installed.[59] In 1968, the sculptures were re-displayed at the Albright-Knox Gallery in Buffalo, New York, and then for a year in New York City's Central Park.[56][51][59] In 1971, some of the artworks were purchased by the Moderna Museet, and permanently installed nearby in an outdoor sculpture garden on Skeppsholmen, an island in central Stockholm.[59][51][60]

In 1968, she first disclosed that she had developed respiratory problems from exposure to dust and fumes in making her artwork.[14][51]

Starting in 1968, Saint Phalle sold Nana inflatable pool toys, which appeared in the April 1968 issue of Vogue magazine.[22] She ignored complaints from art critics, focusing on raising money for her future monumental projects.[21][14] In the coming years, she would face more criticism for over-commercializing and popularizing her artwork, but she raised significant funding that enabled her to finance several ambitious projects on her own.[41] Her production of smaller, lower-cost objects also placed her art within reach of more supporters of her causes.[9] During her career, she produced clothing, jewelry, perfume, glass or porcelain figures, furniture, and craft items, many with a Nana theme.[24]: 110 

From 1969 to 1971, she worked on her first full-scale architecture project, three small sculptural houses commissioned by Rainer von Diez in southern France,[51][50]: 27  which she called Le Rêve de l'oiseau [fr] ("The Dream of the Bird"). The project was a collaboration with him and Jean Tinguely, and a forerunner of her later Tarot Garden project.

In 1969, she joined several other artists under the lead of Tinguely, starting work on Le Cyclop ("Cyclops", also known as La Tête, "The Head", or le Monstre dans la forêt, "the Monster in the forest"), in Milly-la-Forêt, near Paris.[14] Collaborators included Daniel Spoerri, Bernhard Luginbuhl, and Eva Aeppli. Eventually, 15 different people worked on the project, which would not be considered finished until 1994.[61]

In 1969 in an interview on television in her studio, she shared her views about the place of women in politics and said "I think women could administer this world much better. If Black power and women power would get together, they would take over everything. That's the solution. A new world of joy."[62][63]

In November 1970, as part of an artists' reunion celebrating the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Nouveaux Réalistes, Saint Phalle shot at an altar assemblage.[51]

On 13 July 1971, Saint Phalle and Tinguely legally married,[14][36] perhaps for tax savings, as Saint Phalle thus became a Swiss citizen.[21] Their marriage did give the two artists mutual control over each other's artistic estate if one of them should die.[21] That same year, she designed her first pieces of jewelry.[14]

In 1972, she installed Golem, commissioned by the then mayor Teddy Kollek, at a children's playground in the Kiryat Hayovel neighborhood of Jerusalem. It is a giant monster with three red tongues protruding from its mouth, which serve as playground slides.[64][65] This project was the first time she used the shotcrete method of spraying concrete over a metal framework to produce large structures; this method would be used in her further major projects.[65]

Starting in 1972, she engaged Robert Haligon ("Fabricant de Plastiques d’Art") to help fabricate her large-scale sculptures, as well as various editions of artworks. This collaboration would continue for 25 years, including all four of his children, notably Gérard, who would take the lead in later years.[51][14] The collaboration would produce approximately 3,000 sculptures, ranging from monumental outdoors pieces to small multiple editions.[66] Saint Phalle personally trained daughter Marie Haligon to paint her multiple edition sculptures, following a master artist's prototype.[66] Initially, the artist preferred a matte paint finish, shunning shiny surfaces. However, she was forced to adopt glossy surface finishes to attain improved durability of the paints on her outdoors sculptures. Over time, she embraced this glossy visual effect, and began using mirrors and polished stones to surface her artworks.[66]

In 1972, Saint Phalle shot footage for her surreal horror film Daddy, about a deeply troubled father-daughter love-hate relationship.[67][68] The filming was done in a rented castle near Grasse in southeastern France in association with filmmaker Peter Whitehead. In November, the film was shown in London. The following January, she produced a new version of the film, with additional scenes in Soisy and New York, and an expanded cast. The revised version premiered at Lincoln Center for the 11th New York Film Festival in April. She was also commissioned to design the cover of the program for the festival.[51][14]

In 1973, Saint Phalle worked with Tinguely and Rico Weber on a commission from Roger and Fabienne Nellens to build a playhouse in the garden of their home in seaside Knokke-le-Zoute, Belgium. The Le Dragon they built was a substantial structure, 21 feet (6.4 m) high and 110 feet (34 m) long, made using techniques derived from the earlier Le Rêve de l'oiseau and Golem projects. The fantastical building would eventually include a kitchen, bathroom, toilet, heating system, and bedroom, at an estimated cost of $30,000 to $40,000. The exterior was decorated with bright paintings, including ones done by Roger Nellens and the Formula 1 race-car driver Jacky Ickx. Similar to the Golem project the previous year, a long tongue formed an exterior slide from the upper level.[65]

In 1987, graffiti artist Keith Haring would live in Le Dragon while working on a mural commissioned by Roger Nellens at nearby Knokke Casino, and would return for at least three summers.[69][70]: 176–177  With Saint Phalle's enthusiastic consent, he would paint a long fresco along an interior stairway wall.[71][65] Eventually, the building would be designated a Monument Historique of Belgium, though it would remain private property.[65]

Saint Phalle continued to create Nanas for the rest of her life, but would soon focus her attention on a comprehensive project in Italy.

Tarot Garden (1974–1998) edit

The Tarot Garden is not just my garden. It is also the garden of all those who helped me make it. I am the Architect of the garden. I imposed my vision because I could not do otherwise.

The garden was made with difficulties, wild enthusiasm, obsession, and most of all faith. Nothing could have stopped me.

As in all fairy tales, before finding the treasure, I met on my path dragons, sorcerers, magicians, and the Angel of Temperance.

—Niki de Saint Phalle[72]

In 1955, Saint Phalle had visited Antoni Gaudí's Parc Güell in Barcelona, Spain, which inspired her to use diverse materials and found objects as essential elements in her art.[73] Another influence was the Parco dei Mostri in Bomarzo, in the Lazio region of Italy.[74] In the late 1950s, she and Jean Tinguely had visited Le Palais Idéal built by Ferdinand Cheval (known as Le Facteur Cheval) in Hauterives, France, as well as Simon Rodia's Watts Towers in Los Angeles in the early 1960s.[14] Both these latter locations were examples of fantastical outsider art and architecture built by ordinary working men of modest means but an expansive vision. Saint Phalle decided that she wanted to make something similar: a magnificent sculpture garden, but created by a woman.

The founding sponsors for her ambitious project were members of the Italian Agnelli family. In 1974, Saint Phalle became ill with a pulmonary abscess from her work with polyester and was hospitalized in Arizona.[24]: 76  She then recuperated in St. Moritz, Switzerland.[51][14] She reconnected with Marella Agnelli, a friend from the 1950s in New York,[36] and told Agnelli about her ideas for a fantasy garden.[24]: 76  In 1978, Agnelli's brothers Carlo and Nicola Caracciolo offered a parcel of their land in Tuscany for the garden's site.[73]

In 1974, Saint Phalle created a trio of monumental Nanas installed next to the River Leine in Hanover, Germany. City leaders were initially inundated with over 20,000 letters of complaint,[75] but eventually the figures were affectionately nicknamed "Sophie", "Charlotte", and "Caroline" in honor of three of the city's historical women.[49]

In 1975, Saint Phalle wrote the screenplay for Un rêve plus long que la nuit ("A Dream Longer Than the Night", later also called Camélia et le Dragon), and she recruited many of her artist friends to help make it into a film, a phantasmagorical tale of dragons, monsters, and adolescence. A young girl is held captive by a dragon, manages to escape, and must explore Sept Portes du Mystère ("Seven Doors of Mystery") to find love. Saint Phalle's daughter Laura was the lead character in the film, appearing with Saint Phalle, Jean Tinguely, and other artist friends; Peter Whitehead composed the music.[76] For the filming, she designed several pieces of furniture, which were later displayed on the facade of the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels.[14] From 1968 to 1988, she also worked on Last Night I Had a Dream, a sculptural relief painting that included many elements from her earlier life and dreams.[77]

In 1976, she retreated to the Swiss Alps to refine her plans for the sculpture park.[51] In 1977 Ricardo Menon, an Argentinian, became her assistant; he would work closely with her until 1986.[14][78]

In 1977, she worked with the English writer Constantin Mulgrave to design sets for The Traveling Companion, based on a Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale, but the project was never completed.[51] She and Mulgrave lived together for around four years, but Tinguely remained a continually reappearing presence in her life.[24]: 101–103 

In 1977, she also visited Mexico and New Mexico, in search of more extensive artistic inspirations.[51]

In 1978, Saint Phalle started to lay out her sculpture garden in an abandoned quarry in Garavicchio, Tuscany, about 100 kilometres (62 mi) north-west of Rome near the west coast of the Italian peninsula. The following year, sites were cleared, and foundations were established.[73]

In 1979, she produced the first of what would become a new series of sculptures, the Skinnies. These were flat, planar, see-through outlines of heads and figures, highlighted by patches of color. In some ways, they resembled her colorful sketches and drawings but scaled up to monumental size. The series also symbolized Saint Phalle's struggles against emphysema and illness.[79] She continued to produce her Nanas in addition to her new style of sculpture,[14] and both styles of figures would appear in her Tarot Garden project.

In 1980, Saint Phalle and her team began to build the first architectural sculpture in the garden. As the project progressed, Saint Phalle started taking lessons in the Italian language, to better communicate with local workers.[21] The second crew member she hired was Ugo Celletti, a 50-year-old part-time postal delivery man, who discovered a love for mosaic work on the project.[21][80] He would work on the project for 36 years and recruit his nephews to join in; some family members are still involved in maintaining the site.[81][80]

She invited artist friends from Argentina, Scotland, Holland, and France to help work on the sculptures.[21] Over time, Saint Phalle worked with dozens of people, including architects, ceramicists, ironworkers, bricklayers, painters, and mosaic artists.[82] The materials used in the Tarot Garden project would include steel, iron, cement, polyester, ceramic, mosaic glass, mirrors, and polished stones (which she called "M&M's").[13]

The structure of the more massive sculptures was very similar to the temporary Hon installation at the Moderna Museet in 1966, but this time the artworks were outdoors and needed to withstand the long-term weathering effects of sun and rain. The basic shape of the sculptures was established with frameworks made of welded steel rebar. A second layer of lighter-gauge steel reinforcement bars was added, followed by two layers of expanded metal. A specialist firm was then brought in to spray shotcrete onto the structure. A layer of tar for waterproofing and a final layer of white cement produced a sturdy, hollow structure ready for decoration.[73]

In 1980, she also began selling a series of polyester snake chairs, vases, and lamps.[14] That year, she recorded her first attack of rheumatoid arthritis, a painful disease affecting the joints of the skeleton.[14]

In 1980–1981, she designed a colorful paint scheme for a Piper Aerostar 602 P twin-engine airplane, which participated in the first trans-Atlantic race sponsored by the Peter Stuyvesant Foundation of Amsterdam.[14] As an act of playful rebellion against the cigarette manufacturer sponsor, she added a "No Smoking" sign visible on the belly of the plane (she was allergic to tobacco smoke).[83]

In 1981, Saint Phalle rented a small house near the Tarot Garden and hired young people from Garavicchio to help with construction of the garden. Jean Tinguely led a Swiss team, comprising Seppi Imhoff and Rico Weber, and started welding the frames of the sculptures.[51] The following year, Dutch artist Doc Winsen (also called "Dok van Winsen") took up the welding operations.[14]

In 1982, Saint Phalle developed and marketed an eponymous perfume, using the proceeds to help finance her project.[28][27][14][84] The perfume bottle top featured a small sculpture of two intertwined snakes, one golden and the other brightly multicolored.[85] This was one of the first of what came to be called celebrity perfumes, using fame and name recognition to sell scented products.[2] She may have raised as much as a third of the funds she needed for the garden in this way.[21] She actively solicited funding from friends and acquaintances, as well as by selling her artworks.[21]

 
Distant aerial view of Stravinsky Fountain and Centre Georges Pompidou in 2013

In August 1982, Saint Phalle was honored at the Street Festival of the Arts in New York City.[86] Later that year, Saint Phalle collaborated with Tinguely to produce the Stravinsky Fountain, a 15-piece sculptural fountain for Igor Stravinsky Square, located next to the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. Because of its prominent location in Paris, it would become one of the best-known collaborations between the two artists.

From 1983 until 1988 when on site,[73] Saint Phalle lived in a small apartment built into The Empress, a house-sized sphinx-like sculpture in the garden. On the second level, her bedroom was inside one breast, and her kitchen was inside the other one.[21][84] Each of these two rooms had a single recessed circular window, appearing as an inverted nipple when viewed from the outside.[87] In 2000, she would recall: "At last, my lifelong wish to live inside a sculpture was going to be granted: a space entirely made out of undulating curves ... I wanted to invent a new mother, a mother goddess, and be reborn within its form ... I would sleep in one breast. In the other, I would put my kitchen".[47]

The ground floor contained a large mirrored space with a mirrored dining table where she would serve lunch to workers and artists, beneath a chandelier Tinguely had made with a cow skull.[21] She used this motherly role to help reinforce her authority in directing the team of men she needed to help build her project.[21] Eventually, she would grow tired of the cramped space "in the womb of her mother", and after 1988 would move into a New-York-loft-style studio which she had built for herself underground at the site.[73] Her assistant Ricardo Menon would live in the Tower of Babel structure while on site, working closely with Saint Phalle and caring for her during crippling arthritis flareups.[78]

Around 1983, Saint Phalle decided to cover her Tarot Garden sculptures primarily in durable ceramic colored tiles, adding shards of mirrors and glass, and polished stones.[14] Menon helped her recruit Venera Finocchiaro, a ceramics teacher from Rome; she taught local women new techniques for molding ceramic pieces to curved surfaces and installed on-site ovens to finish the pieces.[14][73][21] Starting in 1985, Jean Tinguely added motorized and stationary steel sculptures and fountains to the project.[73] Robert Haligon and his sons did much of the work which involved polyester resins.[73][66] Saint Phalle asked Pierre Marie Lejeune to create a cement path, which he inscribed with hieroglyphs, other signs and symbols, and text.[73] During this period, Saint Phalle dedicated almost all of her time to living and working in the garden.[14]

In 1986 Menon left to attend a drama school in Paris,[14] but kept secret from Saint Phalle that he had contracted AIDS.[78] While there, he recruited fellow Argentinian Marcelo Zitelli to work for Saint Phalle as a gardener, but he in turn became her assistant for other work as well, helping her fabricate sculptures for at least the next decade.[14]

The same year, Saint Phalle took some time to collaborate with Silvio Barandun [de] (a German medical professor of immunology) in writing and illustrating her book AIDS: You Can’t Catch It Holding Hands, intended for students in middle school or high school. It was first published in San Francisco in English, then later translated into five different languages; 70,000 copies were sold or given to medical institutions and schools.[14][88][87] The book was considered influential in early efforts supporting public health education about the disease.[89]

From 1987 to 1993, Saint Phalle spent more of her time in Paris, where she developed many of the smaller sculptures for the garden.[73] From time to time, she would organize gallery shows of her art, including maquettes of her more significant works, to raise funds for the garden project.[73] Saint Phalle also worked on establishing a permanent legal structure for the preservation and maintenance of the garden.[73]

In 1988, Saint Phalle participated in a worldwide touring exhibition of kites. Her contribution was a gigantic kite inspired by her oiseau amoreux ("amorous bird") series of sculptures.[49]

In 1992–1993, corrective maintenance on the Tarot Garden sculptures was performed, using new glues and silicones to attach mirrors and glass elements more securely, to withstand weathering and the touch of many visitors' hands.[73] Starting in 2021, a similar restoration process of re-attaching mirrors was ongoing with Le Cyclop, located in Milly-la-Forêt, near Paris.[90]

The Tarot Garden was under development for almost 30 years, and $5 million (roughly $11 million in 2016 dollars[21]) was spent to construct it.[91] The Foundation of the Tarot Garden was constituted in 1997 (and would attain official juridical status in 2002), and the garden officially opened to the public on 15 May 1998.[73] The completed garden (called il Giardino dei Tarocchi in Italian, and le Jardin des Tarots in French) now contains sculptures and architectural sculptures representing the 22 cards of Major Arcana found in the Tarot deck of cards, plus other smaller artworks.[92] The site covers around 2 hectares (4.9 acres) on the southern slope of the hill of Garavicchio, in Capalbio.[93] The tallest sculptures are about 15 metres (49 ft) high.[93]

Saint Phalle's friend, architect Mario Botta, built a fortress-like protective wall and a porthole-shaped gateway at the entrance to the garden, marking a distinctive separation from the outside world.[73] The entry structure also houses a ticket office, a gift shop, and restrooms for visitors.[92] Within the park, there are fountains, courtyards, a multilevel tower, and many larger-than-life mythical creatures.[73] Saint Phalle designed a brochure containing a map and other information for visitors to the garden, which is open seasonally.[72]

Later years (1990–2002) edit

In her final years, Saint Phalle was afflicted with emphysema,[7] asthma,[7] and severe arthritis,[11][21] which she[79] and many commentators attributed to exposure to airborne glass fibers, fumes, and petrochemicals from materials used in her artworks.[7][27][11][21][94][41] Despite these handicaps, she launched into exploring new venues, new technologies, and new art media.

In 1989, Ricardo Menon, Saint Phalle's former assistant, died of AIDS;[14] his loss plunged Saint Phalle into depression.[78] She created a large mosaic sculpture of a cat, Chat de Ricardo, to serve as his cemetery headstone in Montparnasse Cemetery, Paris, France.[95][78] She placed a second copy of the memorial sculpture in her Tarot Garden in Tuscany, where he had worked closely with her for nearly a decade.[92][78]

In 1990, Saint Phalle completed Skull (Meditation Room), a 5-metre (16 ft) tall room-sized skull-shaped enclosure surfaced in colorful mosaics and lined inside with mosaic mirrors, to memorialize the AIDS crisis.[30][14] She also used bronze for the first time, in a series of Egyptian gods and goddesses.[14]

In 1991, she produced a maquette for Le Temple Idéal ("The Ideal Temple"), a place of worship welcoming all religions, in response to the religious intolerance she saw while working in Jerusalem.[51] The city of Nîmes (France) commissioned her to build the architectural sculpture, but the project never was constructed, due to politics.[51] Over the years, she had become interested in myths and religious traditions beyond her childhood Roman Catholic upbringing, including Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, and ancient Egyptian beliefs.

In August 1991, Jean Tinguely died suddenly of a heart attack in Bern, Switzerland. During his previous two years of declining health, he had stopped taking medication and began preparing for death.[78] The couple had separated years before, but remained very close; the loss of her longtime collaborator and intimate friend affected Saint Phalle deeply. She was writing a memoir letter about their first meeting when news of his death reached her.[24]: 103 

In his memory, Saint Phalle created her first kinetic sculptures, which she called Méta-Tinguelys.[96][49] With initial assistance from her artist friend Larry Rivers, she created a series of kinetic reliefs or moving paintings, called Tableaux Éclatés ("Shattered Paintings"), in homage to her late husband and colleague.[12][51][97] When a visitor approached, a photocell would trigger motors which caused elements of the paintings to separate.[12]

Saint Phalle lost many friends and associates to AIDS, including Jean-Jacques Goetzman, who died in 1992. She memorialized him with Oiseau pour Jean-Jacques ("Bird for Jean-Jacques"), a large reflective abstract bird sculpture at Montparnasse Cemetery.[78]

As her health deteriorated, she worked on creating the Museum Tinguely in Basel, Switzerland, as well as continuing work on her Tarot Garden. During this time, she became a good friend of the museum's architect Mario Botta, and she also engaged him to design the wall and entryway to her Tarot Garden.[73]

In 1994, Saint Phalle published her hand-illustrated and hand-colored memoirs Mon Secret ("My Secret") in French and revealed her childhood history of sexual abuse.[23][21][98] In 1999, she released Traces, an English-language autobiography, which she also illustrated. In 2006, Harry and Me: The Family Years; 1950–1960 was published (posthumously), consisting of her self-illustrated memoirs from the decade when she was married to Harry Mathews.

Saint Phalle moved from Paris to La Jolla, California in 1994 for health reasons.[96][27][73][28][24]: 79  She set up a new studio and produced sculptures which were covered with mirrors, glass, and polished stones, instead of paints.[96][73] In her new workspace, she started to explore novel technologies for designing and creating artwork.[14] She also became an active member of the San Diego art scene, participating in fund-raisers and exhibitions there.[7]

In 1994 she designed a stamp for Swiss Post, with the message "Stop AIDS/Stop SIDA", for which she was awarded the Prix Caran d’Ache.[99][14] She also began a series of silkscreened works, which she called California Diary, featuring local fauna.[24]: 64  She started a new series of Totem pillars of stacked human or animal figures and anatomical fragments.[24]: 64 

In 1994, she finally declared the collaborative sculpture Le Cyclop, started in 1969 by Tinguely and worked on by 15 artists, to be finished.[61] The President of France, François Mitterrand, opened the work to the general public in May.[61] To control vandalism, the installation was donated to the French state, which has taken responsibility for its safeguarding and maintenance.[61] The massive structure is 22.5 metres (74 ft) tall, weighs 350 tonnes (350,000 kg), and is filled with custom-built artworks, including a giant rolling ball sculpture.[61] Many of the artworks are kinetic, endowing the installation with constant motion, and producing loud groaning and other mechanical noises.[61]

In October 1994, the Niki Museum, dedicated to telling the story of her life and artwork, was opened in Nasu, Japan.[14] However, the Niki Museum would later be forced to close in 2011.[100][101]

In 1994, Saint Phalle worked with Peter Schamoni in making a documentary film about her life story, Niki de Saint Phalle: Wer ist das Monster – Du oder ich? ("Who is the Monster, You or I?").[14][102] In 1995, the film was awarded the Bavarian Film Award for best documentary.[24]: 110 

In 1996, she began building Gila, a large dragon-shaped children's playhouse for a San Diego private residence. This project was her first use of digital techniques to enlarge drawings into full-scale construction.[14]

In 1996, she supported the opening of the Museum Tinguely in Basel, by donating 55 major sculptures and over 100 graphic works by Tinguely, which constituted much of the core collection.[51][14] She also donated some of her and her husband's artwork to create L’Espace Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle at the Musée d’art et d’histoire in Fribourg, Switzerland.[14]

In 1997, she designed snake chairs of wood with a mosaic inlay, made by Del Cover and Dave Carr.[51]

In 1998, she created a series of Black Heroes sculptures in honor of African-Americans who made major contributions to sports or jazz, including Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong, and Josephine Baker.[24]: 65  She dedicated the series to her great-grandchildren, who are of mixed race.[14] She also completed her series of 23 large animals for the Noah's Ark sculptural park at the Jerusalem Biblical Zoo with the assistance of her international team of artisans, and in collaboration with architect Mario Botta.[103][14]

In 1999, she debuted a monumental statue of Buddha, a one-eyed contemplative figure seated in the lotus position. The figure is covered with glittering mosaic tiles, glass, mirrors, and polished stones.

On 17 November 2000, she became an honorary citizen of Hannover, Germany, and donated 300 pieces of her artwork to the Sprengel Museum located there. In 2000, the artist was awarded the Praemium Imperiale award for sculpture, by the Japan Art Association.[104] The award is considered to be the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in the world of art.[51]

In 2001, she gave 170 pieces to the Musée d'art moderne et d'art contemporain (MAMAC) in Nice, France, and donated other works to the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris.[51]

She also designed and built for the Port of San Diego a 12-metre (39 ft) tall, 10-ton sculpture, Coming Together. The largest of her Skinnies series, the artwork consists of a colorful half female and a black-and-white half male face joined together, covered with mosaic and stones.[51] The dedication ceremony was delayed to 25 October 2001 because of the September 11 attacks the previous month; the artist was unable to attend because of her deteriorating health.[79] The artwork signified her interpretation of yin and yang, sickness and health, and the integration of dual aspects into a unified whole.[79]

Saint Phalle endured intensive care hospitalization for six months[11] before dying of respiratory failure (caused by emphysema) at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, on 21 May 2002.[7][28] She was attended by her first husband Harry Mathews, and their children.[24]: 79 [21]

Up until the end, she continued to design further developments for her Tarot Garden in Italy, including a maze, for which land was cleared, and metal rods were installed.[73] Upon her death, all new developments in her garden were halted, as she had previously specified.[73][80] Since then, some modest changes have been implemented, mostly to accommodate an increasing number of visitors. A garden cafe designed by Mario Botta has also been constructed.[80] One salient exception is the Tarot figure of Le Fou ("The Fool"), which Saint Phalle relocated within the Tarot Garden at least twice during her life.[43]: 54  This symbolic migrational tradition is expected to be continued from time to time.[80]

Posthumously, the Grotto (2001–2003) was completed according to detailed instructions left by Saint Phalle. The permanent installation, in the Grosser Garten, Herrenhausen Gardens, Hannover, consisted of three rooms which were decorated on every surface with mirrors, glass, ceramics, and colored stones.[105]

Posthumously, Queen Califia's Magical Circle (2000–2003), a 120-foot (37 m) diameter sun-drenched sculpture garden designed by Saint Phalle, was opened in Escondido, California in October 2002. It is enclosed in a 400-foot (120 m) undulating wall topped with large python-like snakes, and includes a maze and 10 large sculptures she designed, comprising the most extensive public collection of her work in the US.[106][11][107] The artworks were inspired by Native American culture,[49] and decorations also included symbols and plaques referring to her earlier Tarot Garden.

Legacy edit

Throughout her career, Saint Phalle was outspoken in addressing important religious conflict, political, pandemic health, race, gender, reproductive rights, food security, climate change, and cultural issues of the time.[108][13][30][79][9] Her Tirs series and assemblages reflected the violence of the early 1960s Algerian War for independence from France[42][9] and asserted her rebellion as part of second-wave feminism.[26][3][38] Her personal style of dress during the mid-sixties also inspired designer Yves Saint Laurent to create his "le Smoking" trouser suits in 1966.[109] In spite of the spectacular use of firearms in her Tirs series of early work, she supported gun control.[68][110]

Her enormous, curvaceous Nanas celebrated the fecund female form, featuring large breasts and buttocks, splayed limbs, joyous dance postures, and often, black skin.[68][111] She was one of the earliest artistic champions of AIDS awareness,[68] creating artworks and a widely distributed educational book.[88][89] Shortly before her death, she exhibited drawings critical of the George W Bush administration.[68][112] In addition to her artworks, she wrote extensively in both French and English, and granted numerous interviews; much of this material is collected in her archives.[113]

Gallery edit

Major exhibitions edit

  • 1998 Niki de Saint Phalle : insider, outsider world inspired art, Mingei International Museum on The Prado, Balboa Park, San Diego, California
  • 2000 La Fête. Die Schenkung Niki de Saint Phalle ("Celebration: The Donation of Niki de Saint Phalle"), Sprengel Museum, Hannover, Germany
  • 2002 [retrospective], Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MAMAC), Nice, France
  • 2014 Niki de Saint Phalle, Grand Palais, Galeries nationales, Paris, France[114][115]
  • 2016 Niki de Saint Phalle, Arken Museum of Modern Art, Ishøj, Denmark
  • 2021 Niki de Saint Phalle: Structures for Life, MoMA PS1, Queens, New York City[87][116][117][10][84]
  • 2021-2022 Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s, Menil Collection, Houston, Texas; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego[118][119]

Public art edit

 
Buddha (1999)
 
Nikigator (2001)
 
Oiseau Amoureux (1993)

Many of Saint Phalle's sculptures are large and are exhibited in public places. The Niki Charitable Art Foundation maintains an online map and catalog of all her extant public artworks, including a pizza oven in La Jolla, California.[120][121][107]

Museums and collections edit

 
Adam

A “Jean Tinguely–Niki de Saint Phalle Museum” exists in Fribourg, Switzerland, entirely dedicated to her and her husbands’ works.

The Sprengel Museum has the largest holdings of Niki de Saint Phalle's work,[7] and other major holdings are at MAMAC.[134] Her archives and artistic rights are held by the Niki Charitable Art Foundation (NCAF) in Santee, California, near San Diego, which became active upon her passing.[113][21] The NCAF maintains an online catalog of artworks in museums and major collections.[134]

The Bechtler Museum of Modern Art in Charlotte, North Carolina has several works by Niki de Saint Phalle in its permanent collection, as well as the Grand Oiseau de Feu sur l’arche ("Great Firebird on the Arch", 1991) which stands on a sidewalk outside the museum.[3]

Bibliography (by publication date) edit

 
The World
  • Saint Phalle, Niki de (1987). AIDS: You Can't Catch It Holding Hands. San Francisco, California: Lapis Press. ISBN 0-932499-52-X.
  • Saint Phalle, Niki de (1994). Mon secret (in French). Paris: La Différence. ISBN 978-2729109783. – autobiography
  • Hulten, Pontus (1995). Niki de Saint Phalle: Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (in German) (2nd ed.). Stuttgart: Verlag Gerd Hatje. ISBN 3-7757-0582-1.
  • Mazzanti, Anna, ed. (1998). Niki de Saint Phalle: The Tarot Garden: [created on the occasion of the exhibition "Il giardino dei Tarocchi di Niki de Saint Phalle" at Orbetello, Polveriera Guzman in 1997] (1. Ital. ed.). Milan: Charta. ISBN 88-8158-167-1.
  • Longenecker, Martha; et al., eds. (1998). Niki de Saint Phalle: Insider, Outsider World Inspired Art: The 20th anniversary exhibition of Mingei International Museum. LaJolla: Mingei Internat. Museum. ISBN 0-914155-10-5.
  • Saint Phalle, Niki de (1999). Traces: An autobiography. Lausanne: Acatos. ISBN 2-940033-43-9.
  • Parente, Janice, ed. (2001). Niki de Saint Phalle: Catalogue Raisonné: 1949–2000. Lausanne: Ed. Acatos. ISBN 2-940033-48-X.
  • de Gréce, Michele; et al. (2002). Niki de Saint Phalle Monographie, Monograph, Catalogue raisonné. Lausanne: Acatos. ISBN 2-940033-63-3.
  • Landeshauptstadt Hannover, Fachbereich Umwelt und Stadtgrün (2003). Niki de Saint Phalle: The Grotto; [published on the occasion of the opening of the Grotto designed by Niki de Saint Phalle in the Herrenhausen Gardens in Hanover]. Ostfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz Verlag. ISBN 3-7757-1276-3.
  • Schulz-Hoffmann, Carla (2003). Niki de Saint Phalle: My Art, My Dreams. Munich; Berlin; London; New York: Prestel. ISBN 3-7913-2876-X.
  • Krempel, Ulrich; Jackson, Rosie (2004). Niki's world: Niki de Saint Phalle (2nd ed.). Munich: Prestel. ISBN 3-7913-3068-3.
  • Saint Phalle, Niki de; Niki Charitable Art Foundation (NCAF) (2006). Harry and me: the family years; 1950–1960. [Wabern-Bern]: Benteli Publishers. ISBN 3-7165-1442-X.
  • Applin, Jo, "Alberto Burri and Niki de Saint Phalle: Relief Sculpture and Violence in the Sixties", Source: Notes in the History of Art, Winter 2008
  • Catherine Francblin, Niki de Saint Phalle: la révolte à l'œuvre: biographie (in French). Paris: Hazan. 2013. ISBN 978-2754104975.
  • Weidemann, Christiane (2014). Niki de Saint Phalle. Prestel. ISBN 978-3-7913-4975-6.
  • Pesapane, Lucia; Saint Phalle, Niki de; Niki Charitable Art Foundation (2014). Le petit dictionnaire Niki de Saint Phalle: en 49 symboles (in French). Paris: Réunion des musées nationales. ISBN 978-2-7118-6155-2. – Compendium of recurring symbols in the artist's work, and some of their possible meanings
  • Gether, Christian; Høholt, Stine; Jalving, Camilla (2016). Niki de Sainte Phalle. Ishøj, Denmark: Arken. ISBN 9788778751140.
  • Krempel, Ulrich; Selter, Regina, eds. (2016). Ich bin eine Kämpferin: Frauenbilder der Niki de Saint Phalle = I'm a fighter: images of women by Niki de Saint Phalle (in German and English). Hatje Cantz. ISBN 978-3-7757-4243-6.
  • Saint-Phalle, Niki de (2021). Niki de Saint Phalle: Structures for Life. New York: MoMA PS1. ISBN 978-1-942884-67-5. – Catalog of the artist's first retrospective exhibition in New York City, where the artist spent much of her childhood and adolescence
  • Dawsey, Jill (2021). Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s. San Diego, California: Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. ISBN 978-0300260106. – Catalog of exhibition covering the 1960s Tirs and early Nanas series of artworks

A short, annotated bibliography is available at the Niki Charitable Art Foundation website.[135]

As of February 2022, an online catalogue raisonné of the artist's "Nanas" is "forthcoming".[136]

Film edit

  • Daddy (1973), written and directed by Saint Phalle and Peter Lorrimer Whitehead
  • Un rêve plus long que la nuit / Camélia et le Dragon ("A dream longer than the night / Camelia and the Dragon", 1976), written and directed by Saint Phalle
  • Niki de Saint Phalle: Wer ist das Monster – Du oder ich? [de] ("Who is the Monster, You or I?", 1995), biographical documentary (in German) by Peter Schamoni in collaboration with Saint Phalle
  • Niki de Saint Phalle: Introspections and Reflections (2003), posthumous documentary by André Blas
  • Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely: Bonnie and Clyde of the arts (2012), posthumous documentary by Louise Faure and Anne Julien[135]
  • Niki de Saint Phalle, un rêve d’architecte (Niki de Saint Phalle: An architect’s dream, 2014), posthumous documentary by Louise Faure and Anne Julien[135]

A comprehensive listing is at the Niki Charitable Art Foundation website.[137]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to the Saint Phalle's wedding announcement in Town and Country (1927), Jeanne Jacqueline Harper, known as Jacqueline, was a daughter of Donald Harper, an American living in Paris, France, and his wife, the former Jeanne Bernard.
  2. ^ According to John Ashbery, Alexandre de Saint-Phalle was the brother of Niki de Saint Phalle's father and also married to her mother's sister, the former Helen Georgia Harper, as explained in "Jacqueline Harper Marries Count: American Lawyer's Daughter Marries Andre de St. Phalle at Château de Fillerval", The New York Times, 7 June 1927. See John Ashbery, Reported Sightings: Art Chronicles, 1957–1987 (Carcanet, 1989).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Life & Work (1930–1949) – Niki Charitable Art Foundation". Niki Charitable Art Foundation. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  2. ^ a b "40 years of Niki's nanas". SWI swissinfo.ch. Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR. 27 October 2005. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Neal, Jane (26 Feb 2008). "Niki de Saint Phalle: The power of playfulness". Telegraph. Retrieved 2017-04-18.
  4. ^ "January 2017 – Niki Charitable Art Foundation". Niki Charitable Art Foundation. Retrieved 2017-04-13.
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Further reading edit

  • Carrick, Jill. “Phallic Victories? Niki de Saint-Phalle’s Tirs”, Art History, vol 26, no. 5, November 2003, pp. 700–729.
  • Rosko, Zoran. "Niki de Saint Phalle (1930–2002) – Egzorcizam puškom (Exorcism by rifle)". roškofrenija (in Croatian and English). Retrieved 2017-04-13. – various reviews of Saint Phalle's artworks and cinema

External links edit

  • Official website of the artist's foundation, NCAF
  • Official website of the Tarot Garden sculpture park
  • Official website of Queen Califia's Magical Circle sculpture park
  • Official website of Le Cyclop
  • Stuart Collection, UCSD
  • Personal blog on Tarot Garden
  • Catalogue Raisonné research
  • Walkthrough video tour of the Tarot Garden, from the Grand Palais retrospective
  • Niki de Saint Phalle – Der Traum vom fantastischen Garten, 50-minute documentary by Fabian Hirschi (in German)
  • A brief video overview of Saint Phalle's art, produced by the Tate Gallery and presented by the Khan Academy
  • Video excerpt showing construction, operation, and later demolition of Hon – en katedral

niki, saint, phalle, french, pronunciation, niki, born, catherine, marie, agnès, saint, phalle, october, 1930, 2002, french, american, sculptor, painter, filmmaker, author, colorful, hand, illustrated, books, widely, noted, female, monumental, sculptors, saint. Niki de Saint Phalle French pronunciation niki d e sɛ fal born Catherine Marie Agnes Fal de Saint Phalle 1 29 October 1930 21 May 2002 was a French American 5 6 sculptor painter filmmaker and author of colorful hand illustrated books Widely noted as one of the few female monumental sculptors 7 Saint Phalle was also known for her social commitment and work 8 9 Niki de Saint Phalle1970 portrait by Lothar WollehBornCatherine Marie Agnes Fal de Saint Phalle 1 1930 10 29 29 October 1930Neuilly sur Seine Hauts de Seine FranceDied21 May 2002 2002 05 21 aged 71 La Jolla California United StatesNationalityFrench American Swiss 2 EducationSelf taught in art 3 Known forSculpture painting filmmakingNotable workNanasTarot GardenStyleNouveau realisme Feminist artSpouse s Harry Mathews m 1949 div 1961 wbr 4 Jean Tinguely m 1971 died 1991 wbr AwardsPrix Caran d Ache 1994 Praemium Imperiale 2000 Patron s Agnelli familyWebsitenikidesaintphalle wbr orgHer career was divided into two major phases feminist wrath expressed via and 22 guns shot at plaster sculptures inside which she had hidden bags of wet paint and feminist celebration of femininity through sculptures of female bodies in fibreglass and polyester resin which were frequently enormous 10 She had a difficult and traumatic childhood and a much disrupted education which she wrote about many decades later After an early marriage and two children she began creating art in a naive experimental style She first received worldwide attention for angry violent assemblages which had been shot by firearms These evolved into Nanas light hearted whimsical colorful large scale sculptures of animals monsters and female figures Her most comprehensive work was the Tarot Garden a large sculpture garden containing numerous works ranging up to house sized creations Saint Phalle s idiosyncratic style has been called outsider art she had no formal training in art 3 but associated freely with many other contemporary artists writers and composers 11 Her books and abundant correspondence were written and brightly colored in a childish style but throughout her lifetime she addressed many controversial and important global problems in the bold way which children often question and call out unacceptable neglect 9 Throughout her creative career she collaborated with other well known artists such as Jasper Johns Robert Rauschenberg Larry Rivers composer John Cage and architect Mario Botta as well as dozens of less known artists and craftspersons For several decades she worked especially closely with Swiss kinetic artist Jean Tinguely who also became her second husband In her later years she suffered from multiple chronic health problems attributed to repeated exposure to airborne glass fibers and petrochemical fumes from the experimental materials she had used in her pioneering artworks but she continued to create prolifically until the end of her life A critic has observed that Saint Phalle s insistence on exuberance emotion and sensuality her pursuit of the figurative and her bold use of color have not endeared her to everyone in a minimalist age 12 She was well known in Europe 12 but her work was little seen in the US until her final years in San Diego Another critic said The French born American raised artist is one of the most significant female and feminist artists of the 20th century and one of the few to receive recognition in the male dominated art world during her lifetime 13 Contents 1 Early life and education 1930 1948 2 First marriage and children 1949 1960 3 Tirs 1961 1963 4 Nanas 1964 1973 5 Tarot Garden 1974 1998 6 Later years 1990 2002 7 Legacy 8 Gallery 9 Major exhibitions 10 Public art 11 Museums and collections 12 Bibliography by publication date 13 Film 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly life and education 1930 1948 editCatherine Marie Agnes Fal de Saint Phalle was born on October 29 1930 in Neuilly sur Seine Hauts de Seine near Paris 1 14 Her father was Count Andre Marie de Saint Phalle 1906 1967 a French banker and her mother was an American named Jeanne Jacqueline Harper 1908 1980 15 16 Note 1 Marie Agnes was the second of five children 1 and her cousins included the French novelist Therese de Saint Phalle Baroness Jehan de Drouas citation needed her double cousin 17 daughter of Count Alexandre de Saint Phalle brother of Count Andre Marie and his wife Helene Georgia Harper sister of Jeanne Jacqueline 18 19 Another cousin was the American born investment banker lawyer and former Office of Strategic Services agent Thibaut de Saint Phalle who served in the Carter administration as a director of the Export Import Bank of the United States 1977 1981 17 20 Marie Agnes was born one year after Black Tuesday and the French economy was also suffering in the aftermath of the infamous stock market crash that initiated the Great Depression 21 Within months of her birth her father s finance company closed and her parents moved with her oldest brother to the suburbs of New York City she was left with her maternal grandparents in Nievre near the geographical center of France 21 Around 1933 she rejoined her parents in Greenwich Connecticut her father had found work as manager of the American branch of the Saint Phalle family s bank 11 In 1937 the family moved to East 88th Street and Park Avenue 22 in the affluent Upper East Side neighborhood of New York City 12 14 By this time Marie Agnes was known as Niki the name she would use from then on 14 Niki grew up in a strict Catholic environment against which she repeatedly rebelled 23 Her mother was temperamental and violent beating the younger children and forcing them to eat even if they were not hungry 21 Both of her younger siblings Elizabeth and Richard de Saint Phalle would later commit suicide as adults 21 10 The atmosphere at home was tense the only place where Niki felt comfortable and warm was in the kitchen overseen by a black cook 24 74 Decades later Niki would reveal that she had suffered years of sexual abuse from her father starting at the age of 11 23 25 12 24 74 She would later refer to the environment where she grew up as enfer hell 26 She spent most of her childhood and adolescence in New York City and summers in Connecticut or Long Island 22 She frequently returned to France to visit relatives 1 becoming fluent in both French and American English 12 In 1937 she attended school at the Convent of the Sacred Heart on East 91st Street in Manhattan After she was expelled in 1941 she rejoined her maternal grandparents who had moved to Princeton New Jersey and she briefly attended the public school there 14 She returned to the Upper East Side and studied there at the Brearley School from 1942 to 1944 23 There she met Jackie Matisse granddaughter of artist Henri Matisse they would become lifelong friends 22 However Saint Phalle was dismissed for painting in red the fig leaves on the school s classical statuary 27 21 14 28 Despite this she would later say it was there that I became a feminist They inculcated in us that women can and must accomplish great things 23 22 She was then enrolled in a convent school in Suffern New York 21 but was expelled 29 She finally graduated from the Oldfields School in Glencoe Maryland in 1947 14 During her late teenage years Saint Phalle became a fashion model at the age of 18 she appeared on the cover of Life 26 September 1949 30 and three years later on the November 1952 cover of French Vogue 30 1 She also appeared in the pages of Elle 31 and Harper s Bazaar At one point when Gloria Steinem spotted Saint Phalle walking down Fifty seventh Street purseless and in a cowboy getup In an interview quoted by the show s curator Ruba Katrib in the catalogue Steinem recalled thinking That is the first free woman I have ever seen in real life I want to be just like her 10 First marriage and children 1949 1960 edit nbsp Niki de Saint Phalle in 1964 nbsp Parts of Le Paradis Fantastique 1967 1971 an early collaboration of Saint Phalle and Jean TinguelyAt the age of 18 Saint Phalle married Harry Mathews whom she had first met at the age of 11 he was 12 through her father 21 23 24 91 Six years later they again encountered each other by chance on a train to Princeton and soon became a couple 24 91 Initially they had a civil ceremony on 6 June 1949 in New York City Hall 24 91 At the urging of Niki s mother they also had a religious rite at the French Church of New York the following February 14 24 91 Although her parents accepted the union her husband s family objected to her Catholic background and cut them off financially causing them to resort to occasional shoplifting 21 They moved to Cambridge Massachusetts so Mathews could study music at Harvard University 21 14 Saint Phalle began to paint in oils and gouaches but aimed to pursue a career in acting 32 14 Their first child Laura was born in April 1951 In 1952 the small family moved to Paris where Harry continued his studies in conducting at I Ecole Normale de Musique 14 The new parents were casual even negligent in their care 24 93 21 but their children would benefit from better financial circumstances after Mathews received an inheritance 21 Saint Phalle rejected the staid conservative values of her family which dictated domestic positions for wives and particular strict rules of conduct 23 Poet John Ashbery recalled that Saint Phalle s artistic pursuits were rejected in turn by relatives her uncle French banker Count Alexandre de Saint Phalle reportedly takes a dim view of her artistic activities Ashbery observed Note 2 However after marrying young and becoming a mother she found herself living the same bourgeois lifestyle that she had attempted to escape 11 For about a decade the family would wander around France and Europe living a bohemian lifestyle In Nice Saint Phalle and Mathews would have separate affairs in 1953 after she attacked her husband s mistress she took an overdose of sleeping pills but they had little effect because she was manic at the time 21 When Harry discovered a stash of knives razors and scissors under a mattress he took his wife to a mental clinic in Nice where she was treated with electroshock therapy and insulin shock therapy 23 21 Liberated from routine household work she focused on creating artwork instead and improved enough to be discharged in six weeks 21 Around the same time her husband abandoned his music studies and started to write his first novel eventually switching to a career in writing 14 While in Paris on a modeling assignment in 1954 Saint Phalle was introduced to the American French painter Hugh Weiss fr who became both her friend and artistic mentor He encouraged her to continue painting in her self taught style 14 11 In September 1954 the small family moved to Deia Majorca Spain where her son Philip was born in May 1955 24 93 21 14 While in Spain Saint Phalle read the works of Proust and visited Madrid and Barcelona where she became deeply affected by the work of architect Antoni Gaudi 33 Gaudi s influence opened many previously unimagined possibilities for Saint Phalle especially the use of unusual materials and objets trouves as structural elements in sculpture and architecture Saint Phalle was particularly struck by Gaudi s Park Guell which would inspire her to one day create her own garden based artwork that would combine artistic and natural elements Saint Phalle continued to paint particularly after she and her family moved to Paris in the mid 1950s Her first art exhibition was held in 1956 in Switzerland where she displayed her naive style of oil painting 14 In 1956 she met the Swiss artist Jean Tinguely and his wife artist Eva Aeppli Saint Phalle attempted her first large scale sculpture enlisting Tinguely to make an iron armature which she covered with plaster and paint 14 In the late 1950s Saint Phalle became ill with hyperthyroidism and tachycardia which were eventually treated by an operation in 1958 34 In 1959 Saint Phalle first encountered multiple artworks by Yves Klein Marcel Duchamp Daniel Spoerri Willem de Kooning Jackson Pollock Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns Seeing these avant garde works triggered her first great artistic crisis 24 42 She switched from oil painting to gouaches and gloss paint and began to produce assemblages from household objects and castoffs 24 42 By this time she had decided to dedicate herself fully to creating art free from the obligations of everyday family life 24 75 76 In 1960 she and Harry separated by mutual agreement and her husband moved to another apartment with their two children 24 93 21 14 At that time her daughter Laura was nine and her son Philip was five years old 24 75 Mathews would occasionally buy artworks from his wife as a way of providing her modest support and she would visit him and the children periodically 24 93 She soon moved in with Jean Tinguely who by then had separated from his own wife Eva Aeppli 24 95 35 He was becoming well known for his kinetic sculptures made from cast off mechanisms and junk In many ways the pair were opposites and sometimes had violent disagreements and frequent affairs with others 24 95 98 12 They would live together intermittently and collaborate closely on artistic projects for over a decade before marrying in 1971 21 7 36 Two years later they separated but remained on good terms and continued to collaborate on various projects up through Tinguely s death in 1991 7 27 In 1960 Tinguely introduced her to Pontus Hulten then the director of the Moderna Museet Modern Museum in Stockholm Sweden Over the next few years he would invite her to participate in important exhibitions and acquire her artworks for the museum 14 He would later become the first director of the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris 1974 1981 where he continued to be influential in promoting wider recognition of Saint Phalle s artwork Tirs 1961 1963 edit nbsp Autel d or Golden Altar 1962 resembles smaller versions of the Tirs series but was not shot or paint splatteredSaint Phalle created a series of works in the early 1960s she called Tirs Shootings or Shots The series began as target pictures with painted bullseye targets prominently displayed within her painted collages such as Saint Sebastien Portrait of My Lover Portrait of My Beloved Martyr necessaire 1961 30 or Assemblage Figure with Dartboard Head 1962 37 She would invite viewers to throw darts at the dartboards embedded as faces in her figurative assemblages which were influenced by the targets painted by her friend Jasper Johns 38 Soon she would start by embedding knives razor blades scissors eggbeaters baby doll arms and other household items in plaster covering a large board along with bags filled with colorful paints cans of spray paint and sometimes tomato 21 Also she might suspend bags of paint or cans of spray paint in front of the white painted assemblage She would then repeatedly shoot the assemblage with a pistol rifle or miniature cannon causing the liquids to bleed or to spray out 35 21 24 44 Her first staged public shooting event was in February 1961 attended by Jean Tinguely Daniel Spoerri and Pierre Restany among others 38 Her early art performance events took place in the Impasse Ronsin a trash strewn back alley in the Montparnasse district of Paris It was the site of the improvised studios of Constantin Brancuși Jean Tinguely Yves Klein Max Ernst Les Lalanne and other experimental artists in the 1950s and 1960s 39 As founder of the Nouveau realisme New Realist movement Restany asked Saint Phalle to join this group of French artists upon seeing her performance she would become the only female member of this group 38 21 The extreme expressions of violence attracted media attention catapulting Saint Phalle into the ranks of avant garde artistic rebellion 3 The Tirs combined performance body art sculpture and painting in the artistic ferment of the 1960s 6 Saint Phalle began to present variations on this process in art museums and galleries and recruited other artists to join in staged public happenings where some of her colleagues would also pull the trigger At American performances she would meet many other emerging artists including Robert Rauschenberg Ad Reinhardt Frank Stella and Ed Kienholz 38 She also organized indoors events at art galleries where she would invite visitors to shoot at her assemblages 14 Saint Phalle participated in Spoerri s Edition MAT Multiplication d Art Transformable program of multiple artwork editions supplying simpler versions of her Tirs works with detailed instructions on how to shoot them with a 22 rifle 38 Saint Phalle carefully documented her artistic process in the Tirs with writing still photos and films 38 She would attach common readymade artifacts to a board attach bags of colorful paint whitewash everything and then dip the assemblage into milk white plaster 38 Once it had dried the collection was ready for shooting by a purchaser In June 1961 Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely joined Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg in a concert happening called Variations II orchestrated by avant garde American composer John Cage and held at the American Embassy in Paris While David Tudor played Cage compositions on the piano the artists created their works of art on stage as the audience watched the proceedings 38 14 In August 1961 Marcel Duchamp introduced Saint Phalle and Tinguely to Salvador Dali who invited them to create a life sized exploding bull with fireworks Toro de Fuego This Homenage a Dali Homage to Dali was wheeled out after the end of a traditional Spanish bullfight in Figueras Catalonia Spain and exploded in front of the audience 24 27 35 27 14 In 1962 she had her first one woman show in New York City at the gallery run by Alexander Iolas 22 40 It included Homage to Le Facteur Cheval a shooting gallery where visitors could fire on one of her Tirs installations 22 40 This began her long working relationship with the gallerist eventually comprising at least 17 exhibitions of her work 22 An exclusive 1962 open air shooting event in the Malibu Hills above Los Angeles was attended by Hollywood celebrities including Jane Fonda and John Houseman 41 Attendees from the art world included John Cage Ed Ruscha and Leo Castelli while Ed Kienholz helped to manage the firearms 42 In most of these public performances Saint Phalle was impeccably dressed in a fashionable white pantsuit 24 45 By 1963 she had taken the series to galleries in New York City and Los Angeles inviting the public to participate in the shootings In Los Angeles she shot a large scale King Kong assemblage she had constructed paint splattering the embedded sculpted faces of politicians such as John F Kennedy Fidel Castro and Charles De Gaulle with Santa Claus and Donald Duck as well 41 This work would later be acquired by the Moderna Museet in Stockholm 30 and would mark her transition to a new series of fantastic monsters animals and female figures 14 24 47 Throughout her career snakes birds and dragons would become recurring symbols in her artworks 13 43 While in New York City Saint Phalle and Tinguely stayed in the Hotel Chelsea in 1962 and again in 1964 1965 22 In 1963 the couple purchased an old hotel called Auberge au Cheval Blanc White Horse Inn in Soisy sur Ecole 44 kilometres 27 mi southeast of Paris 12 14 It had previously been a hotel a cafe a cinema and even a brothel 12 but the new owners converted it into artistic studios which they would share over the decades to come Nanas 1964 1973 edit nbsp Saint Phalle in her first figurative survey museum exhibition Les Nanas au pouvoir at Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam 1967 nbsp Gwendolyn 2 1966 1990 nbsp Le poete et sa muse Poet and his Muse 1978 nbsp Blue Nana 2000 nbsp Nana Dansante jaune Dancing Nana Yellow nbsp A black NanaSaint Phalle next explored the various roles of women in what would develop into her best known and most prolific series of sculptures 3 She started making life size dolls of women such as brides and mothers giving birth monsters and large heads Initially they were made of soft materials such as wool cloth and papier mache but they soon evolved into plaster over a wire framework and plastic toys some painted all white 14 6 As the series developed into larger monumental works Saint Phalle used composite fiberglass reinforced polyester plastic also known as FRP or GRP decorated with multiple bright colored acrylic or polyester paints She also used polyurethane foam in many of her early sculptures 44 These innovative materials enabled the construction of colorful large scale sculptures with new ease and fluidity of form Saint Phalle unknowingly used dangerous fabrication and painting processes that released airborne glass fibers and chemicals including styrene epoxy and toxic solvents 45 24 57 In 1963 64 she created a series of sculptures protesting stereotypical societal roles for women as child bearers devouring mothers witches and prostitutes 14 Some of her early artworks from this Bride period depicted ghostly skeletal brides dressed in white 46 which have been compared to Miss Havisham an ethereal character in Charles Dickens novel Great Expectations 47 Over time these figures became more joyful whimsical colorful and larger in scale 26 Inspired by a collaborative drawing with American artist Larry Rivers of his wife her pregnant friend Clarice Price Saint Phalle began to portray archetypal female figures with a more optimistic view of the position of women in society 48 28 21 Gwendoline 1965 was the first major sculpture in what would become a lifetime series of these works 49 The newer figures took on ecstatic dance poses 49 and even acrobatic positions such as handstands and cartwheels Saint Phalle s light hearted figures have been compared to the joyful dancers of Matisse and the sturdy female figures by Gaston Lachaise Aristide Maillol and Rodin 23 By 1965 she was calling her artistic expressions of the proverbial everywoman Nanas after a French slang word that is roughly equivalent to broad 28 or chick 3 33 The term also recalls the childish French taunt nananere 50 37 The first of these freely posed forms made of papier mache yarn and cloth were exhibited at the Alexander Iolas Gallery in Paris in September 1965 During this show she joined a type of tombola raffle organized by the Artist s Club of New York whereby artworks were randomly left in coin operated luggage lockers at Pennsylvania Station and keys were offered for 10 each 51 For this show Iolas also published Saint Phalle s first artist book 49 that included her handwritten text in combination with her drawings of Bananas 51 Encouraged by Iolas she started a highly productive output of graphics work that accompanied her exhibitions which included silk screened prints posters books and writings 14 In the years to come she would publish multiple hand lettered books profusely illustrated with colorful drawings and diagrams on topics such as AIDS prevention and various periods in her life story 14 In 1966 Saint Phalle collaborated with Jean Tinguely and Per Olof Ultvedt on a temporary indoor sculpture installation Hon en katedral which means She a Cathedral in Swedish 50 30 filling a large temporary gallery in the Moderna Museet in Stockholm Sweden During construction Saint Phalle recruited Swiss art student Rico Weber de who had been working as a dishwasher in the museum restaurant 52 in the following years he would become a vital assistant and collaborator for both Saint Phalle and Tinguely 52 A team of 8 people worked strenuously for 40 days first building a frame using metal rebar covering it with chicken wire sheathing it with fabric attached with smelly animal glue and then painting the inside of the enclosure black and painting the outside in bright colors 52 The final structure was 82 feet 25 m long and 30 feet 9 1 m wide weighing around 6 tonnes 6 000 kg In the tabloid sized newsprint catalog published for the show Saint Phalle included a diagram showing the artistic influences on her design which included Simon Rodia s Watts Towers Ferdinand Cheval s Le Palais Ideal and the architecture of Antoni Gaudi 50 32 The outer form was a giant reclining sculpture of a pregnant woman a Nana whose voluminous interior could be entered through a door sized vaginal opening between her legs 53 Written on one of Hon s massive thighs was the motto Honi soit qui mal y pense May he be shamed who thinks badly of it 24 59 50 37 Inside the massive sculpture were a 12 seat cinema theater a milk bar inside a breast a fish pond and a brain built by Tinguely with moving mechanical parts 21 27 In addition the sprawling Nana contained a coin telephone a love seat sofa a museum of fake paintings a sandwich vending machine an art installation by Ultvedt and a playground slide for children 52 After an initial shocked silence the installation elicited extensive public commentary in magazines and newspapers throughout the world raising awareness of the Moderna Museet 52 Over 100 000 visitors crowded in to experience the immersive environment including many children 24 26 59 52 At the end of 3 months the entire temporary setup was demolished and removed except for the head which was preserved by the museum in its permanent collection 52 Some small fragments were attached to limited edition exhibition catalogs and sold as mementos 52 Around this time Saint Phalle also designed stage sets and costumes for theatrical productions Eloge de La Folie Praise of the Madness 1966 a ballet by Roland Petit an adaptation of the Aristophanes play Lysistrata 1966 and a German language play she co wrote with Rainer von Diez fr titled ICH All About Me 1968 54 51 14 Large fixed or moveable Nana figures were prominent in several of these productions 24 59 In 1967 Saint Phalle began working with polyester resin 53 a material which could be shaped easily but would transform into a hard smooth weather resistant surface This new technology enabled her to construct large fantastical figures for display outdoors in public spaces and parks 24 57 The material is reasonably durable outdoors similar materials are used for boats and car bodies although decades of weather exposure can eventually cause deterioration requiring specialized art conservation measures 55 In August 1967 the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam opened Saint Phalle s first retrospective exhibition Les Nanas au pouvoir Nana Power For the show Niki created her first Nana Dream House and Nana Fountain and also showed plans for her first Nana Town 14 In 1967 she exhibited Le Paradis Fantastique The Fantastic Paradise a collaborative grouping of nine of her sculptures with six machines built by Tinguely on the rooftop terrace of the 8 level French Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal 56 57 The composition was originally conceived of as an attack by Tinguely s dark mechanical constructions upon Saint Phalle s brightly colored animals and female figures a kind of amorous warfare 58 24 100 Although the French Pavilion itself was popular most visitors did not see the rooftop terrace where the sculptures were installed 59 In 1968 the sculptures were re displayed at the Albright Knox Gallery in Buffalo New York and then for a year in New York City s Central Park 56 51 59 In 1971 some of the artworks were purchased by the Moderna Museet and permanently installed nearby in an outdoor sculpture garden on Skeppsholmen an island in central Stockholm 59 51 60 In 1968 she first disclosed that she had developed respiratory problems from exposure to dust and fumes in making her artwork 14 51 Starting in 1968 Saint Phalle sold Nana inflatable pool toys which appeared in the April 1968 issue of Vogue magazine 22 She ignored complaints from art critics focusing on raising money for her future monumental projects 21 14 In the coming years she would face more criticism for over commercializing and popularizing her artwork but she raised significant funding that enabled her to finance several ambitious projects on her own 41 Her production of smaller lower cost objects also placed her art within reach of more supporters of her causes 9 During her career she produced clothing jewelry perfume glass or porcelain figures furniture and craft items many with a Nana theme 24 110 From 1969 to 1971 she worked on her first full scale architecture project three small sculptural houses commissioned by Rainer von Diez in southern France 51 50 27 which she called Le Reve de l oiseau fr The Dream of the Bird The project was a collaboration with him and Jean Tinguely and a forerunner of her later Tarot Garden project In 1969 she joined several other artists under the lead of Tinguely starting work on Le Cyclop Cyclops also known as La Tete The Head or le Monstre dans la foret the Monster in the forest in Milly la Foret near Paris 14 Collaborators included Daniel Spoerri Bernhard Luginbuhl and Eva Aeppli Eventually 15 different people worked on the project which would not be considered finished until 1994 61 In 1969 in an interview on television in her studio she shared her views about the place of women in politics and said I think women could administer this world much better If Black power and women power would get together they would take over everything That s the solution A new world of joy 62 63 In November 1970 as part of an artists reunion celebrating the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Nouveaux Realistes Saint Phalle shot at an altar assemblage 51 On 13 July 1971 Saint Phalle and Tinguely legally married 14 36 perhaps for tax savings as Saint Phalle thus became a Swiss citizen 21 Their marriage did give the two artists mutual control over each other s artistic estate if one of them should die 21 That same year she designed her first pieces of jewelry 14 In 1972 she installed Golem commissioned by the then mayor Teddy Kollek at a children s playground in the Kiryat Hayovel neighborhood of Jerusalem It is a giant monster with three red tongues protruding from its mouth which serve as playground slides 64 65 This project was the first time she used the shotcrete method of spraying concrete over a metal framework to produce large structures this method would be used in her further major projects 65 Starting in 1972 she engaged Robert Haligon Fabricant de Plastiques d Art to help fabricate her large scale sculptures as well as various editions of artworks This collaboration would continue for 25 years including all four of his children notably Gerard who would take the lead in later years 51 14 The collaboration would produce approximately 3 000 sculptures ranging from monumental outdoors pieces to small multiple editions 66 Saint Phalle personally trained daughter Marie Haligon to paint her multiple edition sculptures following a master artist s prototype 66 Initially the artist preferred a matte paint finish shunning shiny surfaces However she was forced to adopt glossy surface finishes to attain improved durability of the paints on her outdoors sculptures Over time she embraced this glossy visual effect and began using mirrors and polished stones to surface her artworks 66 In 1972 Saint Phalle shot footage for her surreal horror film Daddy about a deeply troubled father daughter love hate relationship 67 68 The filming was done in a rented castle near Grasse in southeastern France in association with filmmaker Peter Whitehead In November the film was shown in London The following January she produced a new version of the film with additional scenes in Soisy and New York and an expanded cast The revised version premiered at Lincoln Center for the 11th New York Film Festival in April She was also commissioned to design the cover of the program for the festival 51 14 In 1973 Saint Phalle worked with Tinguely and Rico Weber on a commission from Roger and Fabienne Nellens to build a playhouse in the garden of their home in seaside Knokke le Zoute Belgium The Le Dragon they built was a substantial structure 21 feet 6 4 m high and 110 feet 34 m long made using techniques derived from the earlier Le Reve de l oiseau and Golem projects The fantastical building would eventually include a kitchen bathroom toilet heating system and bedroom at an estimated cost of 30 000 to 40 000 The exterior was decorated with bright paintings including ones done by Roger Nellens and the Formula 1 race car driver Jacky Ickx Similar to the Golem project the previous year a long tongue formed an exterior slide from the upper level 65 In 1987 graffiti artist Keith Haring would live in Le Dragon while working on a mural commissioned by Roger Nellens at nearby Knokke Casino and would return for at least three summers 69 70 176 177 With Saint Phalle s enthusiastic consent he would paint a long fresco along an interior stairway wall 71 65 Eventually the building would be designated a Monument Historique of Belgium though it would remain private property 65 Saint Phalle continued to create Nanas for the rest of her life but would soon focus her attention on a comprehensive project in Italy Le Paradis Fantastique 1967 1971 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Tarot Garden 1974 1998 editMain article Tarot Garden The Tarot Garden is not just my garden It is also the garden of all those who helped me make it I am the Architect of the garden I imposed my vision because I could not do otherwise The garden was made with difficulties wild enthusiasm obsession and most of all faith Nothing could have stopped me As in all fairy tales before finding the treasure I met on my path dragons sorcerers magicians and the Angel of Temperance Niki de Saint Phalle 72 In 1955 Saint Phalle had visited Antoni Gaudi s Parc Guell in Barcelona Spain which inspired her to use diverse materials and found objects as essential elements in her art 73 Another influence was the Parco dei Mostri in Bomarzo in the Lazio region of Italy 74 In the late 1950s she and Jean Tinguely had visited Le Palais Ideal built by Ferdinand Cheval known as Le Facteur Cheval in Hauterives France as well as Simon Rodia s Watts Towers in Los Angeles in the early 1960s 14 Both these latter locations were examples of fantastical outsider art and architecture built by ordinary working men of modest means but an expansive vision Saint Phalle decided that she wanted to make something similar a magnificent sculpture garden but created by a woman The founding sponsors for her ambitious project were members of the Italian Agnelli family In 1974 Saint Phalle became ill with a pulmonary abscess from her work with polyester and was hospitalized in Arizona 24 76 She then recuperated in St Moritz Switzerland 51 14 She reconnected with Marella Agnelli a friend from the 1950s in New York 36 and told Agnelli about her ideas for a fantasy garden 24 76 In 1978 Agnelli s brothers Carlo and Nicola Caracciolo offered a parcel of their land in Tuscany for the garden s site 73 In 1974 Saint Phalle created a trio of monumental Nanas installed next to the River Leine in Hanover Germany City leaders were initially inundated with over 20 000 letters of complaint 75 but eventually the figures were affectionately nicknamed Sophie Charlotte and Caroline in honor of three of the city s historical women 49 In 1975 Saint Phalle wrote the screenplay for Un reve plus long que la nuit A Dream Longer Than the Night later also called Camelia et le Dragon and she recruited many of her artist friends to help make it into a film a phantasmagorical tale of dragons monsters and adolescence A young girl is held captive by a dragon manages to escape and must explore Sept Portes du Mystere Seven Doors of Mystery to find love Saint Phalle s daughter Laura was the lead character in the film appearing with Saint Phalle Jean Tinguely and other artist friends Peter Whitehead composed the music 76 For the filming she designed several pieces of furniture which were later displayed on the facade of the Palais des Beaux Arts in Brussels 14 From 1968 to 1988 she also worked on Last Night I Had a Dream a sculptural relief painting that included many elements from her earlier life and dreams 77 In 1976 she retreated to the Swiss Alps to refine her plans for the sculpture park 51 In 1977 Ricardo Menon an Argentinian became her assistant he would work closely with her until 1986 14 78 In 1977 she worked with the English writer Constantin Mulgrave to design sets for The Traveling Companion based on a Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale but the project was never completed 51 She and Mulgrave lived together for around four years but Tinguely remained a continually reappearing presence in her life 24 101 103 In 1977 she also visited Mexico and New Mexico in search of more extensive artistic inspirations 51 In 1978 Saint Phalle started to lay out her sculpture garden in an abandoned quarry in Garavicchio Tuscany about 100 kilometres 62 mi north west of Rome near the west coast of the Italian peninsula The following year sites were cleared and foundations were established 73 In 1979 she produced the first of what would become a new series of sculptures the Skinnies These were flat planar see through outlines of heads and figures highlighted by patches of color In some ways they resembled her colorful sketches and drawings but scaled up to monumental size The series also symbolized Saint Phalle s struggles against emphysema and illness 79 She continued to produce her Nanas in addition to her new style of sculpture 14 and both styles of figures would appear in her Tarot Garden project In 1980 Saint Phalle and her team began to build the first architectural sculpture in the garden As the project progressed Saint Phalle started taking lessons in the Italian language to better communicate with local workers 21 The second crew member she hired was Ugo Celletti a 50 year old part time postal delivery man who discovered a love for mosaic work on the project 21 80 He would work on the project for 36 years and recruit his nephews to join in some family members are still involved in maintaining the site 81 80 She invited artist friends from Argentina Scotland Holland and France to help work on the sculptures 21 Over time Saint Phalle worked with dozens of people including architects ceramicists ironworkers bricklayers painters and mosaic artists 82 The materials used in the Tarot Garden project would include steel iron cement polyester ceramic mosaic glass mirrors and polished stones which she called M amp M s 13 The structure of the more massive sculptures was very similar to the temporary Hon installation at the Moderna Museet in 1966 but this time the artworks were outdoors and needed to withstand the long term weathering effects of sun and rain The basic shape of the sculptures was established with frameworks made of welded steel rebar A second layer of lighter gauge steel reinforcement bars was added followed by two layers of expanded metal A specialist firm was then brought in to spray shotcrete onto the structure A layer of tar for waterproofing and a final layer of white cement produced a sturdy hollow structure ready for decoration 73 In 1980 she also began selling a series of polyester snake chairs vases and lamps 14 That year she recorded her first attack of rheumatoid arthritis a painful disease affecting the joints of the skeleton 14 In 1980 1981 she designed a colorful paint scheme for a Piper Aerostar 602 P twin engine airplane which participated in the first trans Atlantic race sponsored by the Peter Stuyvesant Foundation of Amsterdam 14 As an act of playful rebellion against the cigarette manufacturer sponsor she added a No Smoking sign visible on the belly of the plane she was allergic to tobacco smoke 83 In 1981 Saint Phalle rented a small house near the Tarot Garden and hired young people from Garavicchio to help with construction of the garden Jean Tinguely led a Swiss team comprising Seppi Imhoff and Rico Weber and started welding the frames of the sculptures 51 The following year Dutch artist Doc Winsen also called Dok van Winsen took up the welding operations 14 In 1982 Saint Phalle developed and marketed an eponymous perfume using the proceeds to help finance her project 28 27 14 84 The perfume bottle top featured a small sculpture of two intertwined snakes one golden and the other brightly multicolored 85 This was one of the first of what came to be called celebrity perfumes using fame and name recognition to sell scented products 2 She may have raised as much as a third of the funds she needed for the garden in this way 21 She actively solicited funding from friends and acquaintances as well as by selling her artworks 21 nbsp Distant aerial view of Stravinsky Fountain and Centre Georges Pompidou in 2013In August 1982 Saint Phalle was honored at the Street Festival of the Arts in New York City 86 Later that year Saint Phalle collaborated with Tinguely to produce the Stravinsky Fountain a 15 piece sculptural fountain for Igor Stravinsky Square located next to the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris Because of its prominent location in Paris it would become one of the best known collaborations between the two artists From 1983 until 1988 when on site 73 Saint Phalle lived in a small apartment built into The Empress a house sized sphinx like sculpture in the garden On the second level her bedroom was inside one breast and her kitchen was inside the other one 21 84 Each of these two rooms had a single recessed circular window appearing as an inverted nipple when viewed from the outside 87 In 2000 she would recall At last my lifelong wish to live inside a sculpture was going to be granted a space entirely made out of undulating curves I wanted to invent a new mother a mother goddess and be reborn within its form I would sleep in one breast In the other I would put my kitchen 47 The ground floor contained a large mirrored space with a mirrored dining table where she would serve lunch to workers and artists beneath a chandelier Tinguely had made with a cow skull 21 She used this motherly role to help reinforce her authority in directing the team of men she needed to help build her project 21 Eventually she would grow tired of the cramped space in the womb of her mother and after 1988 would move into a New York loft style studio which she had built for herself underground at the site 73 Her assistant Ricardo Menon would live in the Tower of Babel structure while on site working closely with Saint Phalle and caring for her during crippling arthritis flareups 78 Around 1983 Saint Phalle decided to cover her Tarot Garden sculptures primarily in durable ceramic colored tiles adding shards of mirrors and glass and polished stones 14 Menon helped her recruit Venera Finocchiaro a ceramics teacher from Rome she taught local women new techniques for molding ceramic pieces to curved surfaces and installed on site ovens to finish the pieces 14 73 21 Starting in 1985 Jean Tinguely added motorized and stationary steel sculptures and fountains to the project 73 Robert Haligon and his sons did much of the work which involved polyester resins 73 66 Saint Phalle asked Pierre Marie Lejeune to create a cement path which he inscribed with hieroglyphs other signs and symbols and text 73 During this period Saint Phalle dedicated almost all of her time to living and working in the garden 14 In 1986 Menon left to attend a drama school in Paris 14 but kept secret from Saint Phalle that he had contracted AIDS 78 While there he recruited fellow Argentinian Marcelo Zitelli to work for Saint Phalle as a gardener but he in turn became her assistant for other work as well helping her fabricate sculptures for at least the next decade 14 The same year Saint Phalle took some time to collaborate with Silvio Barandun de a German medical professor of immunology in writing and illustrating her book AIDS You Can t Catch It Holding Hands intended for students in middle school or high school It was first published in San Francisco in English then later translated into five different languages 70 000 copies were sold or given to medical institutions and schools 14 88 87 The book was considered influential in early efforts supporting public health education about the disease 89 From 1987 to 1993 Saint Phalle spent more of her time in Paris where she developed many of the smaller sculptures for the garden 73 From time to time she would organize gallery shows of her art including maquettes of her more significant works to raise funds for the garden project 73 Saint Phalle also worked on establishing a permanent legal structure for the preservation and maintenance of the garden 73 In 1988 Saint Phalle participated in a worldwide touring exhibition of kites Her contribution was a gigantic kite inspired by her oiseau amoreux amorous bird series of sculptures 49 In 1992 1993 corrective maintenance on the Tarot Garden sculptures was performed using new glues and silicones to attach mirrors and glass elements more securely to withstand weathering and the touch of many visitors hands 73 Starting in 2021 a similar restoration process of re attaching mirrors was ongoing with Le Cyclop located in Milly la Foret near Paris 90 The Tarot Garden was under development for almost 30 years and 5 million roughly 11 million in 2016 dollars 21 was spent to construct it 91 The Foundation of the Tarot Garden was constituted in 1997 and would attain official juridical status in 2002 and the garden officially opened to the public on 15 May 1998 73 The completed garden called il Giardino dei Tarocchi in Italian and le Jardin des Tarots in French now contains sculptures and architectural sculptures representing the 22 cards of Major Arcana found in the Tarot deck of cards plus other smaller artworks 92 The site covers around 2 hectares 4 9 acres on the southern slope of the hill of Garavicchio in Capalbio 93 The tallest sculptures are about 15 metres 49 ft high 93 Saint Phalle s friend architect Mario Botta built a fortress like protective wall and a porthole shaped gateway at the entrance to the garden marking a distinctive separation from the outside world 73 The entry structure also houses a ticket office a gift shop and restrooms for visitors 92 Within the park there are fountains courtyards a multilevel tower and many larger than life mythical creatures 73 Saint Phalle designed a brochure containing a map and other information for visitors to the garden which is open seasonally 72 Tarot Garden nbsp Sign at entrance nbsp View into entrance nbsp Mirrored mosaic ceiling inside The Empress nbsp Kitchen used by Saint Phalle inside The Empress nbsp Detail of Justice nbsp Mosaic ceiling inside The Tower nbsp Floor paving at The Tower nbsp Walkway inscribed with arcane symbols nbsp Pathway signed by Saint Phalle nbsp The Empress internal view Later years 1990 2002 editIn her final years Saint Phalle was afflicted with emphysema 7 asthma 7 and severe arthritis 11 21 which she 79 and many commentators attributed to exposure to airborne glass fibers fumes and petrochemicals from materials used in her artworks 7 27 11 21 94 41 Despite these handicaps she launched into exploring new venues new technologies and new art media In 1989 Ricardo Menon Saint Phalle s former assistant died of AIDS 14 his loss plunged Saint Phalle into depression 78 She created a large mosaic sculpture of a cat Chat de Ricardo to serve as his cemetery headstone in Montparnasse Cemetery Paris France 95 78 She placed a second copy of the memorial sculpture in her Tarot Garden in Tuscany where he had worked closely with her for nearly a decade 92 78 In 1990 Saint Phalle completed Skull Meditation Room a 5 metre 16 ft tall room sized skull shaped enclosure surfaced in colorful mosaics and lined inside with mosaic mirrors to memorialize the AIDS crisis 30 14 She also used bronze for the first time in a series of Egyptian gods and goddesses 14 In 1991 she produced a maquette for Le Temple Ideal The Ideal Temple a place of worship welcoming all religions in response to the religious intolerance she saw while working in Jerusalem 51 The city of Nimes France commissioned her to build the architectural sculpture but the project never was constructed due to politics 51 Over the years she had become interested in myths and religious traditions beyond her childhood Roman Catholic upbringing including Jewish Hindu Buddhist and ancient Egyptian beliefs In August 1991 Jean Tinguely died suddenly of a heart attack in Bern Switzerland During his previous two years of declining health he had stopped taking medication and began preparing for death 78 The couple had separated years before but remained very close the loss of her longtime collaborator and intimate friend affected Saint Phalle deeply She was writing a memoir letter about their first meeting when news of his death reached her 24 103 In his memory Saint Phalle created her first kinetic sculptures which she called Meta Tinguelys 96 49 With initial assistance from her artist friend Larry Rivers she created a series of kinetic reliefs or moving paintings called Tableaux Eclates Shattered Paintings in homage to her late husband and colleague 12 51 97 When a visitor approached a photocell would trigger motors which caused elements of the paintings to separate 12 Saint Phalle lost many friends and associates to AIDS including Jean Jacques Goetzman who died in 1992 She memorialized him with Oiseau pour Jean Jacques Bird for Jean Jacques a large reflective abstract bird sculpture at Montparnasse Cemetery 78 As her health deteriorated she worked on creating the Museum Tinguely in Basel Switzerland as well as continuing work on her Tarot Garden During this time she became a good friend of the museum s architect Mario Botta and she also engaged him to design the wall and entryway to her Tarot Garden 73 In 1994 Saint Phalle published her hand illustrated and hand colored memoirs Mon Secret My Secret in French and revealed her childhood history of sexual abuse 23 21 98 In 1999 she released Traces an English language autobiography which she also illustrated In 2006 Harry and Me The Family Years 1950 1960 was published posthumously consisting of her self illustrated memoirs from the decade when she was married to Harry Mathews Saint Phalle moved from Paris to La Jolla California in 1994 for health reasons 96 27 73 28 24 79 She set up a new studio and produced sculptures which were covered with mirrors glass and polished stones instead of paints 96 73 In her new workspace she started to explore novel technologies for designing and creating artwork 14 She also became an active member of the San Diego art scene participating in fund raisers and exhibitions there 7 In 1994 she designed a stamp for Swiss Post with the message Stop AIDS Stop SIDA for which she was awarded the Prix Caran d Ache 99 14 She also began a series of silkscreened works which she called California Diary featuring local fauna 24 64 She started a new series of Totem pillars of stacked human or animal figures and anatomical fragments 24 64 In 1994 she finally declared the collaborative sculpture Le Cyclop started in 1969 by Tinguely and worked on by 15 artists to be finished 61 The President of France Francois Mitterrand opened the work to the general public in May 61 To control vandalism the installation was donated to the French state which has taken responsibility for its safeguarding and maintenance 61 The massive structure is 22 5 metres 74 ft tall weighs 350 tonnes 350 000 kg and is filled with custom built artworks including a giant rolling ball sculpture 61 Many of the artworks are kinetic endowing the installation with constant motion and producing loud groaning and other mechanical noises 61 In October 1994 the Niki Museum dedicated to telling the story of her life and artwork was opened in Nasu Japan 14 However the Niki Museum would later be forced to close in 2011 100 101 In 1994 Saint Phalle worked with Peter Schamoni in making a documentary film about her life story Niki de Saint Phalle Wer ist das Monster Du oder ich Who is the Monster You or I 14 102 In 1995 the film was awarded the Bavarian Film Award for best documentary 24 110 In 1996 she began building Gila a large dragon shaped children s playhouse for a San Diego private residence This project was her first use of digital techniques to enlarge drawings into full scale construction 14 In 1996 she supported the opening of the Museum Tinguely in Basel by donating 55 major sculptures and over 100 graphic works by Tinguely which constituted much of the core collection 51 14 She also donated some of her and her husband s artwork to create L Espace Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle at the Musee d art et d histoire in Fribourg Switzerland 14 In 1997 she designed snake chairs of wood with a mosaic inlay made by Del Cover and Dave Carr 51 In 1998 she created a series of Black Heroes sculptures in honor of African Americans who made major contributions to sports or jazz including Miles Davis Louis Armstrong and Josephine Baker 24 65 She dedicated the series to her great grandchildren who are of mixed race 14 She also completed her series of 23 large animals for the Noah s Ark sculptural park at the Jerusalem Biblical Zoo with the assistance of her international team of artisans and in collaboration with architect Mario Botta 103 14 In 1999 she debuted a monumental statue of Buddha a one eyed contemplative figure seated in the lotus position The figure is covered with glittering mosaic tiles glass mirrors and polished stones On 17 November 2000 she became an honorary citizen of Hannover Germany and donated 300 pieces of her artwork to the Sprengel Museum located there In 2000 the artist was awarded the Praemium Imperiale award for sculpture by the Japan Art Association 104 The award is considered to be the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in the world of art 51 In 2001 she gave 170 pieces to the Musee d art moderne et d art contemporain MAMAC in Nice France and donated other works to the Musee des Arts Decoratifs in Paris 51 She also designed and built for the Port of San Diego a 12 metre 39 ft tall 10 ton sculpture Coming Together The largest of her Skinnies series the artwork consists of a colorful half female and a black and white half male face joined together covered with mosaic and stones 51 The dedication ceremony was delayed to 25 October 2001 because of the September 11 attacks the previous month the artist was unable to attend because of her deteriorating health 79 The artwork signified her interpretation of yin and yang sickness and health and the integration of dual aspects into a unified whole 79 Saint Phalle endured intensive care hospitalization for six months 11 before dying of respiratory failure caused by emphysema at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla on 21 May 2002 7 28 She was attended by her first husband Harry Mathews and their children 24 79 21 Up until the end she continued to design further developments for her Tarot Garden in Italy including a maze for which land was cleared and metal rods were installed 73 Upon her death all new developments in her garden were halted as she had previously specified 73 80 Since then some modest changes have been implemented mostly to accommodate an increasing number of visitors A garden cafe designed by Mario Botta has also been constructed 80 One salient exception is the Tarot figure of Le Fou The Fool which Saint Phalle relocated within the Tarot Garden at least twice during her life 43 54 This symbolic migrational tradition is expected to be continued from time to time 80 Posthumously the Grotto 2001 2003 was completed according to detailed instructions left by Saint Phalle The permanent installation in the Grosser Garten Herrenhausen Gardens Hannover consisted of three rooms which were decorated on every surface with mirrors glass ceramics and colored stones 105 Posthumously Queen Califia s Magical Circle 2000 2003 a 120 foot 37 m diameter sun drenched sculpture garden designed by Saint Phalle was opened in Escondido California in October 2002 It is enclosed in a 400 foot 120 m undulating wall topped with large python like snakes and includes a maze and 10 large sculptures she designed comprising the most extensive public collection of her work in the US 106 11 107 The artworks were inspired by Native American culture 49 and decorations also included symbols and plaques referring to her earlier Tarot Garden Legacy editThroughout her career Saint Phalle was outspoken in addressing important religious conflict political pandemic health race gender reproductive rights food security climate change and cultural issues of the time 108 13 30 79 9 Her Tirs series and assemblages reflected the violence of the early 1960s Algerian War for independence from France 42 9 and asserted her rebellion as part of second wave feminism 26 3 38 Her personal style of dress during the mid sixties also inspired designer Yves Saint Laurent to create his le Smoking trouser suits in 1966 109 In spite of the spectacular use of firearms in her Tirs series of early work she supported gun control 68 110 Her enormous curvaceous Nanas celebrated the fecund female form featuring large breasts and buttocks splayed limbs joyous dance postures and often black skin 68 111 She was one of the earliest artistic champions of AIDS awareness 68 creating artworks and a widely distributed educational book 88 89 Shortly before her death she exhibited drawings critical of the George W Bush administration 68 112 In addition to her artworks she wrote extensively in both French and English and granted numerous interviews much of this material is collected in her archives 113 Gallery edit nbsp Golem 1971 Kiryat Hayovel Israel nbsp La Grande Lune Great Moon 1985 1992 MAHF Fribourg Switzerland nbsp Adam and Eve 1985 Ulm Germany nbsp Lifesaver Fountain 1993 Duisburg Germany nbsp Les Footballeurs Soccer Players 1993 The Olympic Museum Lausanne nbsp L Ange Protecteur Guardian Angel 1997 Zurich HauptbahnhofMajor exhibitions editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2016 1998 Niki de Saint Phalle insider outsider world inspired art Mingei International Museum on The Prado Balboa Park San Diego California 2000 La Fete Die Schenkung Niki de Saint Phalle Celebration The Donation of Niki de Saint Phalle Sprengel Museum Hannover Germany 2002 retrospective Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art MAMAC Nice France 2014 Niki de Saint Phalle Grand Palais Galeries nationales Paris France 114 115 2016 Niki de Saint Phalle Arken Museum of Modern Art Ishoj Denmark 2021 Niki de Saint Phalle Structures for Life MoMA PS1 Queens New York City 87 116 117 10 84 2021 2022 Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s Menil Collection Houston Texas Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego 118 119 Public art edit nbsp Buddha 1999 nbsp Nikigator 2001 nbsp Oiseau Amoureux 1993 Many of Saint Phalle s sculptures are large and are exhibited in public places The Niki Charitable Art Foundation maintains an online map and catalog of all her extant public artworks including a pizza oven in La Jolla California 120 121 107 Le Paradis Fantastique The Fantastic Paradise 1967 Moderna Museet Stockholm Sweden in collaboration with Tinguely Golem 1971 Kiryat Hayovel Jerusalem 64 122 Hannover Nanas 1973 along the Leibnizufer in Hannover Germany La Fontaine Stravinsky Stravinsky Fountain or Fontaine des automates 1982 near the Centre Pompidou Paris in collaboration with Tinguely Sun God 1983 a fanciful winged creature next to the Faculty Club on the campus of the University of California San Diego as a part of the Stuart Collection of public art La Lune The Moon 1987 Brea Mall in Brea California Fontaine de Chateau Chinon 1988 at Chateau Chinon Nievre in collaboration with Tinguely a commission by French President Francois Mitterrand Le Grand Oiseau Amoureux Great Amorous Bird 1988 1989 Mendrisio Switzerland depicts a Nana in a Yab Yum embrace with a large standing bird 123 124 Grand Oiseau de Feu sur l arche Great Firebird on the Arch 1991 in front of Bechtler Plaza in Charlotte North Carolina 125 La Temperance 1992 in Centre Hamilius Luxembourg Ville Luxembourg this work was in storage as the site was being demolished 126 Le Monstre du Loch Ness Loch Ness Monster 1992 Musee d art moderne et d art contemporain MAMAC Nice France Oiseau Amoureux Fontaine Lebensretter Brunnen Amorous Bird Fountain Lifesaver Fountain 1989 1993 Duisburg Germany in collaboration with Tinguely Le Cyclop 1969 1994 Milly la Foret France in collaboration with Tinguely and 15 other artists 61 127 Tympanum 1996 triangular mirror mosaic and mirrored pediment above the entrance to the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art Scotland 128 L Ange Protecteur Guardian Angel 1997 in the hall of the Zurich Hauptbahnhof the largest rail station in Switzerland Le poete et sa muse Poet and His Muse 1998 Mingei International Museum on The Prado Balboa Park San Diego California Big Ganesh 1998 San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art the Hindu elephant god Ganesh dances with a small mouse 129 Miles Davis 1999 outside of Hotel Negresco in Nice France Noah s Ark 1994 2001 Jerusalem Biblical Zoo 23 works in a collaborative sculpture park with architect Mario Botta 103 130 64 Nikigator 2001 Mingei International Museum on The Prado Balboa Park San Diego California Coming Together 2001 San Diego Convention Center 131 Grotto 2001 2003 Herrenhauser Gardens in Hannover Germany 132 Queen Califia s Magical Circle 2003 a sculpture garden in Kit Carson Park Escondido California 133 107 Museums and collections edit nbsp AdamA Jean Tinguely Niki de Saint Phalle Museum exists in Fribourg Switzerland entirely dedicated to her and her husbands works The Sprengel Museum has the largest holdings of Niki de Saint Phalle s work 7 and other major holdings are at MAMAC 134 Her archives and artistic rights are held by the Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF in Santee California near San Diego which became active upon her passing 113 21 The NCAF maintains an online catalog of artworks in museums and major collections 134 The Bechtler Museum of Modern Art in Charlotte North Carolina has several works by Niki de Saint Phalle in its permanent collection as well as the Grand Oiseau de Feu sur l arche Great Firebird on the Arch 1991 which stands on a sidewalk outside the museum 3 Bibliography by publication date edit nbsp The WorldSaint Phalle Niki de 1987 AIDS You Can t Catch It Holding Hands San Francisco California Lapis Press ISBN 0 932499 52 X Saint Phalle Niki de 1994 Mon secret in French Paris La Difference ISBN 978 2729109783 autobiography Hulten Pontus 1995 Niki de Saint Phalle Kunst und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in German 2nd ed Stuttgart Verlag Gerd Hatje ISBN 3 7757 0582 1 Mazzanti Anna ed 1998 Niki de Saint Phalle The Tarot Garden created on the occasion of the exhibition Il giardino dei Tarocchi di Niki de Saint Phalle at Orbetello Polveriera Guzman in 1997 1 Ital ed Milan Charta ISBN 88 8158 167 1 Longenecker Martha et al eds 1998 Niki de Saint Phalle Insider Outsider World Inspired Art The 20th anniversary exhibition of Mingei International Museum LaJolla Mingei Internat Museum ISBN 0 914155 10 5 Saint Phalle Niki de 1999 Traces An autobiography Lausanne Acatos ISBN 2 940033 43 9 Parente Janice ed 2001 Niki de Saint Phalle Catalogue Raisonne 1949 2000 Lausanne Ed Acatos ISBN 2 940033 48 X de Grece Michele et al 2002 Niki de Saint Phalle Monographie Monograph Catalogue raisonne Lausanne Acatos ISBN 2 940033 63 3 Landeshauptstadt Hannover Fachbereich Umwelt und Stadtgrun 2003 Niki de Saint Phalle The Grotto published on the occasion of the opening of the Grotto designed by Niki de Saint Phalle in the Herrenhausen Gardens in Hanover Ostfildern Ruit Hatje Cantz Verlag ISBN 3 7757 1276 3 Schulz Hoffmann Carla 2003 Niki de Saint Phalle My Art My Dreams Munich Berlin London New York Prestel ISBN 3 7913 2876 X Krempel Ulrich Jackson Rosie 2004 Niki s world Niki de Saint Phalle 2nd ed Munich Prestel ISBN 3 7913 3068 3 Saint Phalle Niki de Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 2006 Harry and me the family years 1950 1960 Wabern Bern Benteli Publishers ISBN 3 7165 1442 X Applin Jo Alberto Burri and Niki de Saint Phalle Relief Sculpture and Violence in the Sixties Source Notes in the History of Art Winter 2008 Catherine Francblin Niki de Saint Phalle la revolte a l œuvre biographie in French Paris Hazan 2013 ISBN 978 2754104975 Weidemann Christiane 2014 Niki de Saint Phalle Prestel ISBN 978 3 7913 4975 6 Pesapane Lucia Saint Phalle Niki de Niki Charitable Art Foundation 2014 Le petit dictionnaire Niki de Saint Phalle en 49 symboles in French Paris Reunion des musees nationales ISBN 978 2 7118 6155 2 Compendium of recurring symbols in the artist s work and some of their possible meanings Gether Christian Hoholt Stine Jalving Camilla 2016 Niki de Sainte Phalle Ishoj Denmark Arken ISBN 9788778751140 Krempel Ulrich Selter Regina eds 2016 Ich bin eine Kampferin Frauenbilder der Niki de Saint Phalle I m a fighter images of women by Niki de Saint Phalle in German and English Hatje Cantz ISBN 978 3 7757 4243 6 Saint Phalle Niki de 2021 Niki de Saint Phalle Structures for Life New York MoMA PS1 ISBN 978 1 942884 67 5 Catalog of the artist s first retrospective exhibition in New York City where the artist spent much of her childhood and adolescence Dawsey Jill 2021 Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s San Diego California Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego ISBN 978 0300260106 Catalog of exhibition covering the 1960s Tirs and early Nanas series of artworksA short annotated bibliography is available at the Niki Charitable Art Foundation website 135 As of February 2022 update an online catalogue raisonne of the artist s Nanas is forthcoming 136 Film editDaddy 1973 written and directed by Saint Phalle and Peter Lorrimer Whitehead Un reve plus long que la nuit Camelia et le Dragon A dream longer than the night Camelia and the Dragon 1976 written and directed by Saint Phalle Niki de Saint Phalle Wer ist das Monster Du oder ich de Who is the Monster You or I 1995 biographical documentary in German by Peter Schamoni in collaboration with Saint Phalle Niki de Saint Phalle Introspections and Reflections 2003 posthumous documentary by Andre Blas Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely Bonnie and Clyde of the arts 2012 posthumous documentary by Louise Faure and Anne Julien 135 Niki de Saint Phalle un reve d architecte Niki de Saint Phalle An architect s dream 2014 posthumous documentary by Louise Faure and Anne Julien 135 A comprehensive listing is at the Niki Charitable Art Foundation website 137 See also editIsabelle Collin Dufresne Louise Bourgeois Marisol Escobar Nouveau realismeNotes edit According to the Saint Phalle s wedding announcement in Town and Country 1927 Jeanne Jacqueline Harper known as Jacqueline was a daughter of Donald Harper an American living in Paris France and his wife the former Jeanne Bernard According to John Ashbery Alexandre de Saint Phalle was the brother of Niki de Saint Phalle s father and also married to her mother s sister the former Helen Georgia Harper as explained in Jacqueline Harper Marries Count American Lawyer s Daughter Marries Andre de St Phalle at Chateau de Fillerval The New York Times 7 June 1927 See John Ashbery Reported Sightings Art Chronicles 1957 1987 Carcanet 1989 References edit a b c d e f Life amp Work 1930 1949 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 a b 40 years of Niki s nanas SWI swissinfo ch Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR 27 October 2005 Retrieved 2021 06 03 a b c d e f Neal Jane 26 Feb 2008 Niki de Saint Phalle The power of playfulness Telegraph Retrieved 2017 04 18 January 2017 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 04 13 Video Clips Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b c Niki de Sainte Phalle 17 September 2014 2 February 2015 PDF Grand Palais Galeries nationales Champs Elysees Retrieved 2017 05 06 a b c d e f g h i Muchnic Suzanne 23 May 2002 Niki de Saint Phalle 71 Artist Known for Large Colorful Sculptures Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2017 04 07 Christiane Weidemann 2008 50 women artists you should know Larass Petra Klier Melanie 1970 Munich Prestel ISBN 978 3 7913 3956 6 OCLC 195744889 a b c d e Sluiter Johanna 2021 04 11 Niki de Saint Phalle s Vibrant Multidimensional Universe Hyperallergic Retrieved 2021 06 11 a b c d Schjeldahl Peter The Pioneering Feminism of Niki de Saint Phalle The New Yorker Retrieved 2021 03 31 a b c d e f g h Robb Andy 4 August 2015 Niki de Saint Phalle A Personal Journey in the Public Eye xamou art Retrieved 2017 04 07 a b c d e f g h i j Cohen Roger 7 October 1993 At Home With Niki de Saint Phalle An Artist Her Monsters Her Two Worlds The New York Times Retrieved 2017 04 22 a b c d Jansen Charlotte 12 July 2016 The Art of Niki de Saint Phalle A Rebel Through and Through Huffington Post Retrieved 2017 04 22 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk Fok Kevin Biografia of Niki de Saint Phalle Civil and Municipal Affairs Bureau of Macao S A R Archived from the original on 2017 04 12 Retrieved 2017 04 11 Jacqueline Harper American Lawyer s Daughter Marries Count Andre de St Phalle at Chateau de Fillerval New York Times 7 June 1927 Biographical information title of count and birth dates cited in Joseph Valynseele s Les marechaux de la Restauration te de la Monarchies de Juillet leur famille et leur descendance 1962 page 292 a b JACQUELINE HARPER WEDS FRENCH COUNT American Lawyer s Daughter Marries Andre de St Pha le at Chateau de Fillervai FAMILIES TWICE UNITED Helene an Elder Sister of Bride Is Wife of Bridegroom s Brother Alexandre The New York Times 7 June 1927 Retrieved 2 April 2020 HELENE HARPER WEDS COUNT DE ST PHALLE Daughter of Prominent New York and Paris Lawyer Marries Banker at Father s Chateau The New York Times 7 April 1920 p 11 The RAF Escape Story of Sergeant Jack Marsden BBC WW2 People s War 31 January 2006 Retrieved 26 January 2022 NAVY MAN WEDS ROSAMOND FRAME Lieut Thibault de Saint Phalle Takes Mt Holyoke Alumna as Bride in Cathedral Rectory SHE HAS FIDE ATTENDANTS Both Served With the OSS in Orient Bridegroom Formerly Was With Law Firm Here The New York Times Retrieved 2021 09 26 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an Levy Ariel 18 April 2016 Beautiful Monsters The New Yorker Retrieved 2017 03 28 a b c d e f g h i Niki de Saint Phalle And New York Niki Charitable Art Foundation 9 March 2020 Retrieved 2020 05 25 a b c d e f g h i Lipton Eunice 26 January 2015 The Darkness Behind Niki de Saint Phalle s Colorful Beauties Hyperallergic Retrieved 2017 03 29 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Weidemann Christiane 2014 Niki de Saint Phalle Prestel ISBN 978 3 7913 4975 6 Webster Paul 20 June 1999 Sculptor finally exorcises her rapist father The Guardian Retrieved 2012 10 29 a b c Kearney Beth 2018 ARTS L art feministe de Niki de Saint Phalle DIRE La recherche a votre portee in French FICSUM Fonds d investissement des cycles superieurs de l Universite de Montreal Retrieved 2020 05 23 a b c d e f g Niki de Saint Phalle Obituary The Telegraph 27 May 2002 Retrieved 2017 04 08 a b c d e f Johnson Ken 23 May 2002 Niki de Saint Phalle Sculptor Is Dead at 71 The New York Times Retrieved 2017 04 14 Hess Hugo Niki de Saint Phalle WideWalls Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b c d e f Nechvatal Joseph 29 January 2015 Falling for Niki de Saint Phalle Hyperallergic Retrieved 2017 04 13 Lesso Rosie 1 December 2019 Niki de Saint Phalle An Iconic Art World Rebel TheCollector Retrieved 2022 02 17 Life amp Work 1950 1959 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 a b Pincus Robert L May 23 2002 Celebrated sculptor dead at 71 San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved 2017 04 16 Mathews Harry Living with Niki Tate Archived from the original on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2017 04 15 a b c Life amp Work 1960 1964 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 a b c Life amp Work 1970 1974 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 Sutton Benjamin 3 December 2014 Discovering Niki de Saint Phalle s Eerie Early Work Hyperallergic a b c d e f g h i Woods Nicole L 2 March 2015 Pop Gun Art Niki de Saint Phalle and the Operatic Multiple Living Collections Catalogue Walker Art Center 2 1 Retrieved 2017 04 15 McAuley James 22 September 2016 The Artists and Their Alley in Postwar France The New York Times Retrieved 2021 12 30 a b Aim High On Niki de Saint Phalle s First New York Solo Show in 1962 ARTnews com 2015 02 11 Retrieved 2021 06 09 a b c d Gavin Francesca 19 July 2014 Niki de Saint Phalle lock n load Dazed Retrieved 2017 04 19 a b Young Paul David 2012 01 23 PST Causes Explosions Over Los Angeles ARTnews com Retrieved 2021 06 09 a b Pesapane Lucia 2014 Le petit dictionnaire Niki de Saint Phalle en 49 symboles in French Paris Reunion des musees nationales ISBN 978 2 7118 6155 2 Charlotte Loves Colorful Characters Niki de Saint Phalle The Creation of a New Mythology PDF bechtler org Bechtler Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2017 04 08 May June 2011 McCann Michael Babin Angela 2008 Health hazards manual for artists 6th ed Guilford Conn Lyons Press ISBN 978 1 59921 318 7 Niki de Saint Phalle Room 3 Brides and Monsters Tate Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b Niki de Saint Phalle Art Fortune Retrieved 2017 04 22 Clarice Rivers by Niki De Saint Phalle And Larry Rivers Curiator March 9 2017 Retrieved 2017 04 22 a b c d e f g Niki de Saint Phalle Biography Gallery Diane de Polignac Paris Diane de Polignac Art Gallery Retrieved 2021 06 03 a b c d e Saint Phalle Niki de 2021 Niki de Saint Phalle Structures for Life New York MoMA PS1 ISBN 978 1 942884 67 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Monograph Bio Niki de Saint Phalle PDF mobot org Missouri Botanical Garden Retrieved 2017 04 19 a b c d e f g h Hon a Cathedral 50 years since HON Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 3 June 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 16 a b Life amp Work 1965 1969 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 Muller Elena 2017 01 27 Die Vagina Dialoge Frankfurter Rundschau in German Retrieved 2017 04 16 Beerkens Lydia Breder Fredericke Temporary Art Outdoor Sculptures in Fiberglass Reinforced Polyester Article www getty edu Getty Conservation Institute Retrieved 2017 04 08 a b Niki de Saint Phalle et Jean Tinguely au Pavillon de la France www villes ephemeres org in French 7 January 2012 Retrieved 2017 04 08 Expo 67 France Pavilion www westland net Retrieved 2017 04 08 Pontus Hulten Jean Tinguely une magie plus forte que la mort in French Paris Editions Le Chemin vert 1987 379 p OCLC 185890755 a b c The Paradis fantastique on top of the Pavilion of France The World s Fair Community Retrieved 2017 04 08 Paradis Fantastique Archives Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2020 05 15 a b c d e f g Le Cyclop de Jean Tinguely www lecyclop com in French and English Retrieved 2023 06 14 Video Clips Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2021 04 16 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Niki de Saint Phalle l atelier de l artiste archive sous titree retrieved 2021 10 05 a b c Steinberg Jessica February 20 2014 Jerusalemites fear for the Monster Slide park The Times of Israel Retrieved 2017 04 14 a b c d e A Monster in Belgium The Dragon of Knokke Niki de Saint Phalle Niki Charitable Art Foundation 1 August 2017 Retrieved 2021 03 08 a b c d When polyester resin forms more than a sculpture Niki de Saint Phalle and the Haligon workshop Niki Charitable Art Foundation 2 October 2019 Retrieved 2020 05 15 Niki de Saint Phalle Daddy Tate Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b c d e Ellis Petersen Hannah 27 February 2015 Artist provocateur Niki de Saint Phalle retrospective at Guggenheim Bilbao The Guardian Retrieved 2017 04 17 Dear Keith Works from the Personal Collection of Keith Haring Sotheby s Retrieved 2021 03 08 Gruen John 1992 Keith Haring the authorized biography 1st Fireside ed New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 78150 2 Keith Haring and the Belgian Surf Club Phillips Phillips Auctioneers LLC Retrieved 2021 03 08 a b Saint Phalle Niki de Il Giardino dei Tarocchi PDF Il Giardino dei Tarocchi Fondazione Il Giardino dei Tarocchi Retrieved 2017 04 14 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Chronology The Tarot Garden The Tarot Garden il Giardino Dei Tarocchi Official Website Retrieved 2017 03 29 Fecchio Barbara 12 August 2016 Three Sculpture Gardens in Tuscany Italy Sculpture Nature Retrieved 2017 04 17 Die Nanas Hanover Germany Attractions Lonely Planet Retrieved 2021 06 03 Un reve plus long que la nuit 1976 www unifrance org in French Retrieved 2017 04 15 Niki de Saint Phalle Room 4 Last Night I Had a Dream Tate Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b c d e f g h Niki s Sculptures in Le Cimetiere de Montparnasse Niki Charitable Art Foundation 12 July 2018 Retrieved 2020 05 15 a b c d e The Spirit of Coming Together Niki Charitable Art Foundation 22 May 2020 Retrieved 2020 05 25 a b c d e It s been 20 Years What s new with the Tarot Garden Niki Charitable Art Foundation 28 September 2018 Retrieved 2020 05 15 In Memory of Ugo Celetti Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 31 May 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 18 Saint Phalle Niki de Materials and Crew The Tarot Garden The Tarot Garden il Giardino Dei Tarocchi Official Website The Tarot Garden Retrieved 2017 04 14 Flying Work of Art Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF July 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b c Delson Susan 19 February 2021 Artist Niki de Saint Phalle Took Joy Seriously Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2021 04 22 Herman Barbara March 11 2011 Niki de Saint Phalle 1983 Yesterday s Perfume Retrieved 2017 04 23 Art Block Party Set Up On 32d Street Tonight The New York Times August 30 1982 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 01 23 a b c Hickman Matt 26 February 2021 MoMA PS1 announces first New York retrospective of Niki de Saint Phalle The Architect s Newspaper Retrieved 2021 03 08 a b AIDS you can t catch it holding hands Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 30 November 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b Greenberger Alex 2020 04 16 How Niki de Saint Phalle s Forward Thinking Feminism Changed the Art World ARTnews com Retrieved 2021 06 09 Restauration Restoration Le Cyclop www lecyclop com in French and English Retrieved 2023 06 14 Frank Priscilla 12 August 2016 This Hallucinatory 1970s Sculpture Garden Brings The Tarot Deck To Life Huffington Post Retrieved 2017 03 29 a b c Interactive Map The Tarot Garden il Giardino Dei Tarocchi Official Website Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b The Tarot Garden masterpiece by Niki de Saint Phalle Port Mobility Civitavecchia in Italian 16 September 2015 Retrieved 2017 04 25 Niki de Saint Phalle Biography Infos Art Market www niki de saint phalle com Retrieved 2017 04 07 Meier Allison 1 August 2013 The Tombs of Artists A Last Statement From the Grave Hyperallergic Retrieved 2017 04 13 a b c Life amp Work 1990 1994 Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation Retrieved 2017 03 28 Nanas and FIAC Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 23 October 2014 Retrieved 2017 04 18 Saint Phalle Niki de 1994 Mon secret in French Paris La Difference ISBN 978 2729109783 J ai ecrit ce livre d abord pour moi meme pour tenter de me delivrer enfin de ce viol qui a joue un role si determinant dans ma vie Je suis une rescapee de la mort j avais besoin de laisser la petite fille en moi parler enfin J ai longtemps pense que j etais une exception ce qui m isolait encore plus aujourd hui j ai pu parler a d autres vistimes d un viol les effets calamiteux sont tous les memes desespoir honte humiliation angoisse suicide maladie folie etc Le scandale a enfin eclate tous les jours des revelations jaillissent sur ce secret si jalousement garde pendant des siecles le viol d une multitude d enfants filles ou garcons par un pere un grand pere un voisin un professeur un pretre etc Apres le Secret j ai l intention d ecrire un autre livre adresse aux enfants afin de leur apprendre a se proteger parce que l education qu on leur donne les laisse sans defense contre l adulte Niki de Saint Phalle Biography Jonathan Novak Contemporary Art Retrieved 2017 04 24 Thompson Elizabeth 11 November 2015 Niki de Saint Phalle Wall Street International Retrieved 2017 05 02 英語版 ニキとヨーコ Niki Museum Gallery niki museum jp in Japanese and English Retrieved 2017 05 02 Gelder Lawrence Van 16 October 1996 An Artist With Charm and the Impulse to Shock The New York Times Retrieved 2017 04 24 a b Where the Wild Things Art designistdream com 4 November 2007 Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2010 Niki de Saint Phalle Praemium Imperiale Archived 2014 11 13 at the Wayback Machine Praemium Imperiale Retrieved 12 November 2014 The Grotto by Niki de Saint Phalle Royal Gardens of Herrenhausen Tourist Highlights Places of Interest amp City Tours Tourism amp Culture Welcome to Hannover Home hannover de www hannover de Retrieved 2017 05 02 Queen Califia s Magical Circle Factsheet PDF escondido org Public Art Commission Escondido California Retrieved 2017 04 17 a b c The Magic of Niki de Saint Phalle San Diego San Diego Tourism Authority Retrieved 2020 06 16 Krempel Ulrich Rasmussen Naja Selter Regina Sieg Karoline 2016 I m a Fighter Images of Women by Niki de Saint Phalle in German and English Hatje Cantz ISBN 978 3 7757 4243 6 Emerson Gloria 1966 08 05 A Nude Dress That Isn t Saint Laurent in a New Mad Mood The New York Times R53 Retrieved 2023 07 23 Niki de Saint Phalle an American artist living in France has had the best influence of all on Saint Laurent Miss Saint Phalle always wears trouser suits with boots Now Saint Laurent has copied her black tie trouser suit in velvet and in wool In wool it has a very ruffly white shirt a big black bow at the neck a wide cummerbund of satin and satin stripes down the rather wide pants It is worn with satin boots Guns by Niki deSaint Phalle www artnet com Retrieved 2021 06 11 Californian Diary Black is Different by Niki de Saint Phalle www artnet com Retrieved 2017 05 06 A Political Artist Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 6 November 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b Archives Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 Niki de Saint Phalle l exposition RMN Grand Palais in French Retrieved 2018 03 14 Niki de Saint Phalle toute l expo RMN Grand Palais in French Retrieved 2018 03 14 Greenberger Alex 18 September 2019 Niki de Saint Phalle Pioneering French Feminist Artist to Be Subject of Major Survey at MoMA PS1 in New York ARTnews com Retrieved 2020 05 15 Niki de Saint Phalle Structures for Life at MoMA PS1 Preview of exhibition until MoMA PS1 reopens to the public Arts Summary 27 March 2020 Retrieved 2020 05 15 Niki De Saint Phalle In The 1960s Menil The Menil Collection Retrieved 2021 12 22 Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego MCASD Retrieved 2021 12 22 Public Works Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 Fond of food fun friends and fish Niki Charitable Art Foundation 23 February 2011 Retrieved 2020 05 25 1 Archived September 10 2005 at the Wayback Machine Le Grand Oiseau Amoureux Museum Tinguely Archived from the original on 2017 04 19 Retrieved 2017 04 18 Le bestiaire de Niki de Saint Phalle RMN Grand Palais in French Reunion des musees nationaux et du grand Palais des Champs Elysees Retrieved 2017 04 22 Sarah Gay 2009 11 05 Firebird Finds its Nest at the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art Charlotte Viewpoint Retrieved 9 August 2010 La Temperance 1992 Luxembourg Nikidesaintphalle org Archived from the original on 23 August 2011 Retrieved 20 May 2011 2 Archived February 10 2006 at the Wayback Machine Niki de Saint Phalle Gallery of Modern Art Glasgow HeraldScotland Herald amp Times Group 16 November 2012 Retrieved 2021 06 06 Niki de Saint Phalle Big Ganesh Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego 5 December 2012 Retrieved 2017 04 17 Niki de Saint Phalle Chronology 1930 2002 PDF ci escondido ca us Archived from the original PDF on 17 November 2010 Retrieved 16 November 2010 Public Art Department Port of San Diego Archived from the original on 2008 05 10 Retrieved 2012 10 04 Von 2001 bis 2003 ist die historische Grotte nach den Planen der Kunstlerin Niki de Saint Phalle neu ausgestaltet worden Hannover de Retrieved 9 August 2010 Queen Califia s Magical Circle Garden Queencalifia org Retrieved 2012 10 04 a b Museums amp Collections Niki Charitable Art Foundation Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b c Recent publications The season of awards Niki de Saint Phalle Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF 21 November 2014 Retrieved 2017 04 18 Catalog Raisonne Project Niki de Saint Phalle Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 Videos and Films in the Niki Charitable Art Foundation Archives PDF Niki de Saint Phalle Niki Charitable Art Foundation NCAF Retrieved 2017 04 18 Further reading editCarrick Jill Phallic Victories Niki de Saint Phalle s Tirs Art History vol 26 no 5 November 2003 pp 700 729 Rosko Zoran Niki de Saint Phalle 1930 2002 Egzorcizam puskom Exorcism by rifle roskofrenija in Croatian and English Retrieved 2017 04 13 various reviews of Saint Phalle s artworks and cinemaExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Niki de Saint Phalle Official website of the artist s foundation NCAF Official website of the Tarot Garden sculpture park Official website of Queen Califia s Magical Circle sculpture park Official website of Le Cyclop Stuart Collection UCSD Personal blog on Tarot Garden Catalogue Raisonne research Walkthrough video tour of the Tarot Garden from the Grand Palais retrospective Niki de Saint Phalle Der Traum vom fantastischen Garten 50 minute documentary by Fabian Hirschi in German A brief video overview of Saint Phalle s art produced by the Tate Gallery and presented by the Khan Academy Video excerpt showing construction operation and later demolition of Hon en katedral Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Niki de Saint Phalle amp oldid 1182221168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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