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フランソワーズ・ギロット

 
<div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div> <div><font face=Calibri size=3 color=black>We remember Francoise Gilot for her indomitable spirit and resilience, the only woman with the courage and determination to leave Pablo Picasso. Yet, apart from her association with Picasso, her vision as an artist will ultimately place her work within a suitable twentieth-century art context. Her figurative treatments, embracing subtle tonal harmonies interlaced with an organic interplay of shapes, stand on their merits. “<em>My Children in Brittany II</em>,” a lithograph from 1974, is a charming portrait of her three children, Claude, Paloma, and Aurelia. It demonstrates her ability to synthesize yet transcend her influences and craft a narrative uniquely responsive to family, motherhood, and life.  </font></div>
ブルターニュのわが子たち II1974画像サイズ:26 x 19 5/8 in.プリントサイズ: 29.75x 21.75(75.57 x 55.25 cm)カラーリトグラフ
出所
個人蔵、オークションで入手

フランソワーズ・ジロットは、パブロ・ピカソのもとを去る勇気と決意を持った唯一の女性であり、その不屈の精神と回復力を私たちは記憶している。しかし、ピカソとの関わりは別として、彼女の芸術家としてのヴィジョンは、最終的に彼女の作品を20世紀美術の文脈の中に位置づけることになるだろう。形が有機的に交錯する微妙なトーンのハーモニーを取り入れた彼女の具象画は、その長所によって成り立っている。1974年のリトグラフ、"My Children in Brittany II "は、彼女の3人の子供、クロード、パロマ、オーレリアの魅力的な肖像画である。この作品は、彼女が影響を受けたものを統合しながらも超越し、家族、母性、人生に独自の反応を示す物語を作り上げる能力を示している。  
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