Marie
Laurencin
Influenced by artists and poets alike the work of Marie Laurencin combines both realism and fantasy. Encouraged by her friends Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso, Laurencin developed a personal style and fresh, refined palette. Her paintings are almost exclusively of graceful, mysterious women frequently bedecked with pearls, playing a musical instrument or accompanied by faun.
Although originally trained to be a decorator of porcelain at the Sevres factory, Laurencin took lessons at the Académie Humbert in the early 1900s. During this period she encountered the most famous artists and writers of the day and her painting entitled Group of artists, depicting Apollinaire, Picasso and his mistress Fernande Olivier, and herself, was purchased by Gertrude Stein in 1908.
Following a brief exile in Spain, Marie Laurencin returned to Paris in 1921 and for the next three decades continued to paint, write poetry and design sets and costumes for the theatre and Ballet Russes. She became a popular society portrait painter and her sitters included Coco Chanel, Helena Rubinstein, Emerald, Lady Cunard and Madame André Derain.
Marie Laurencin died in Paris in 1956, she was buried in a white dress holding a rose in one hand and a love letter from Guillaume Apollinaire in the other.
Portrait de Femme Assise
1922
Color Pencils on Paper
11-3/8 x 7-5/8 in.
Other Info Signed, dated and inscribed ‘maison de santé, souvenir à sa Suzanne, 3 juin, 1922’.
Femme aux Perles
1939
Colored pencils on cream wove paper
13-1/4 x 10-1/4 in.
Other Info Signed in pencil, lower left
Conversation Entre Amies
Unknown
Pencil on Paper
8-1/2 x 12 in.
Other Info Signed lower right.
Deux Jeunes Femmes
1949
Colored Pencils and Graphite on Paper
11-3/8 x 9-3/8 in.
Other Info Inscribed and dated ‘La Toussant 49 Chez Arnault” (lower right)
