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=== Depiction in novels and plays ===
=== Depiction in novels and plays ===
A novel based on the life of Suzanne Valadon was written by Elaine Todd Koren and was published in 2001, titled ''Suzanne: of Love and Art''.<ref name= "Koren 2001" >{{cite book |last=Koren |first=Elaine |title=Suzanne: of Love and Art |publisher=Maverick Books |publication-place=Woodstock, NY |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-9672355-2-3 |oclc=47894155}}</ref> An earlier novel by Sarah Baylis, ''Utrillo's Mother'', was published first in England and later in the United States. [[Timberlake Wertenbaker]]'s play, ''[[The Line (play)|The Line]]'' (2009), traces the relationship between Valadon and Degas.<ref name= "Billington 2009" >{{cite web |last=Billington |first=Michael |title=Theatre review: ''The Line'' |website=the Guardian |date=2009-11-24 |url=http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2009/nov/24/the-line-review |access-date=2021-11-15}}</ref> Valadon was the basis for the character Suzanne Rouvier in the novel ''[[The Razor's Edge]]''by[[W.SomersetMaugham]].<ref name= "Meg 2012" >{{cite web |author=Meg |title=suzanneandsomerset|website=the smallest color |date=2012-01-05 |url=http://evenmorecoffeeandoranges.blogspot.com/2012/01/suzanne-and-somerset.html |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>{{Bettersourceneeded|reason=sourceisablog|date=November2021}}
A novel based on the life of Suzanne Valadon was written by Elaine Todd Koren and was published in 2001, titled ''Suzanne: of Love and Art''.<ref name= "Koren 2001" >{{cite book |last=Koren |first=Elaine |title=Suzanne: of Love and Art |publisher=Maverick Books |publication-place=Woodstock, NY |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-9672355-2-3 |oclc=47894155}}</ref> An earlier novel by Sarah Baylis, ''Utrillo's Mother'', was published first in England and later in the United States. [[Timberlake Wertenbaker]]'s play, ''[[The Line (play)|The Line]]'' (2009), traces the relationship between Valadon and Degas.<ref name= "Billington 2009" >{{cite web |last=Billington |first=Michael |title=Theatre review: ''The Line'' |website=the Guardian |date=2009-11-24 |url=http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2009/nov/24/the-line-review |access-date=2021-11-15}}</ref>Several have speculatedValadon was the basis for the character Suzanne Rouvier in the[[W. Somerset Maugham]]'s 1944novel ''[[The Razor's Edge]]''.<refname= "Greene2020 ">{{cite web |last=Greene<!--author identified in souce code & at https://www.artliteracyacademy.com/about-->|first=Serene|title=Suzanne Valadon |website=artliteracyacademy |date=2020-01-13 |url=https://www.artliteracyacademy.com/single-post/2020/01/12/suzanne-valadon-france-1865-1938 |access-date=2024-06-30}}</ref><ref name= "Burke 2017" >{{cite web |last=Burke |first=Desmond T. |title=The Razor's Edge Notes |website=I WANDERLING |date=2017-04-20 |url=https://the-wanderling.com/razor_notes.html |access-date=2024-06-30 |at=Suzanne Rouvier}}</ref><ref name= "p445" >{{cite web |last=Bertell |first=Elizabeth |title=Suzanne Valadon french painter |website=SlideShare |date=2014-05-28 |url=https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/suzanne-valadon-french-painter/35223992#67 |access-date=2024-06-30 |page=67}}</ref><ref name= "Prabook 3743189" >{{cite web |title=Suzanne Valadon |website=Prabook |url=https://prabook.com/web/suzanne.valadon/3743189 |access-date=2024-06-30}}</ref><ref name= "Meg 2012" >{{cite web |author=Meg |title=SuzanneandSomerset|website=the smallest color |date=2012-01-05 |url=http://evenmorecoffeeandoranges.blogspot.com/2012/01/suzanne-and-somerset.html |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref> There were many parallels between Valadon's life and that of the Rouvier character.<ref name= "Rogal 1997">{{citebook|last=Rogal|first=SamuelJ.|title=AWilliam Somerset Maugham encyclopedia |publisher=Greenwood Press |publication-place=Westport, Conn. |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-4294-7631-7 |oclc=70766173 |page=[https://epdf.pub/pdfviewer/web/viewer.html?file=https%3A%2F%2Fepdf.pub%2Fdownload%2Fa-william-somerset-maugham-encyclopedia.html%3Freader%3D1#page=253&zoom=auto,-225,489 253]}}</ref><ref name= "Burke 2017" />


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 19:21, 30 June 2024

Suzanne Valadon
Self-portrait,1898,Museum of Fine Arts Houston
Born
Marie-Clémentine Valadon

(1865-09-23)23 September 1865
Died7 April 1938(1938-04-07)(aged 72)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Known forPainter
MovementPost-Impressionism,Symbolism
Spouses
Partner(s)Erik Satie,Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Suzanne Valadon(23 September 1865 – 7 April 1938) was a French painter who was bornMarie-Clémentine ValadonatBessines-sur-Gartempe,Haute-Vienne,France.In 1894, Valadon became the first woman painter admitted to theSociété Nationale des Beaux-Arts.She was also the mother of painterMaurice Utrillo.

Valadon spent nearly 40 years of her life as an artist.[1]The subjects of her drawings and paintings, such asJoy of Life(1911), included mostly female nudes, portraits of women, still lifes, and landscapes. She never attended the academy and was never confined within a set tradition or style of art.[2]Despite not being confined to any tradition, she shocked the artistic world by painting male nudes as well as less idealized images of women in comparison to those of her male counterparts.[3]

She was a model for many renowned artists. Among them, Valadon appeared in such paintings asDance at Bougival(1883) andDance in the CitybyPierre-Auguste Renoir(1883), andSuzanne Valadon(1885) andThe Hangover (Suzanne Valadon)(1887 - 1889) byHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec.

Early life

Valadon as a young woman

Valadon grew up in poverty with her mother, an unmarriedlaundressinMontmartre.[4]She did not know her father. Known to be quite independent and rebellious, she attended primary school until age eleven when she began working.

She had a series of jobs that included working in a milliner's workshop, at a factory making funeral wreaths, selling vegetables, and as a waitress. At the age of 15, she obtained a job in her most desired field: performing in the circus as an acrobat. She was able to work at the circus because of her connection withCount Antoine de La RochefoucauldandThèo Wagner,two symbolist painters, who were involved in decorating a circus belonging toMedrano.The circus was visited frequently by artists such as Toulouse-Lautrec andBerthe Morisotand it is speculated that this was the inspiration for a painting of Valadon by Morisot.[5]A fall from a trapeze that injured her back is what ultimately ended her circus career after one year.

It is commonly believed that Valadon taught herself how to draw at the age of nine.[6]In theMontmartrequarter of Paris, she pursued her interest in art, first working as a model and a muse for artists, observing and learning their techniques, as she could not afford art lessons herself. She observed and learned from artists, such as Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, before becoming a noted and successful painter in her own right.[7][8]

Model

Valadon is depicted dancing inDance at Bougival(1883), byPierre-Auguste Renoir

Valadon began working as a model in 1880 in Montmartre at age 15.[9]She modeled for more than ten years for many different artists includingBerthe Morisot,[10]Pierre-Cécile Puvis de Chavannes,Théophile Steinlen,Pierre-Auguste Renoir,Jean-Jacques Henner,andHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec.[1]She modeled under the name "Maria" before being nicknamed "Suzanne" by Toulouse-Lautrec, after the biblical story ofSusanna and the Eldersas he felt that she especially preferred modeling for older artists.[11][12]She was Toulouse-Lautrec's lover for two years, which ended when she attempted suicide in 1888.[13][2]

Valadon learned and furthered her art by observing the techniques of the artists for whom she posed.[2]She was considered a very focused, ambitious, rebellious, determined, self-confident, and passionate woman.[14]In the early 1890s, she befriendedEdgar Degas,who was impressed by her bold line drawings and fine paintings. He purchased her work and encouraged her. She remained one of his closest friends until his death in 1917. Art historian Heather Dawkins believed that Valadon's experience as a model added depth to her own images of nude women, which tended to be less idealized than the representations of women by the male post-impressionists.[15]

Morisot's 1880 drawing of Valadon as a tightrope walker preceded it, but the most recognizable early image of Valadon is in Renoir'sDance at Bougivalfrom 1883, the same year that she posed forDance in the City.[16]In 1885, Renoir painted her portrait again asGirl Braiding Her Hair.Another of his portraits of her in 1885,Suzanne Valadon,is of her head and shoulders in profile. Valadon frequented the bars and taverns of Paris with her fellow painters and she was Toulouse-Lautrec's subject in his oil paintingThe Hangover.[17]

Artist

Joy of Life(1911), by Suzanne Valadon,Metropolitan Museum of Art

Valadon was an acclaimed painter of her time, well-respected and championed by contemporaries such as Edgar Degas and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. She was admitted to professional associations and her works were admitted to juried exhibitions. She lived a bohemian life with rebellious vision.[18]

Valadon's earliest surviving signed and dated work is aself-portraitfrom 1883, drawn incharcoalandpastel.[6]She produced mostly drawings between 1883 and 1893, and began painting in 1892. Her first models were family members, especially her son, mother, and niece.[19]

Valadon began painting full-time in 1896.[6]She paintedstill lifes,portraits,flowers,andlandscapesthat are noted for their strong composition and vibrant colors. She was, however, best known for her candid female nudes.[20]Her work attracted attention partly because, by painting unidealized nudes, she upset the social norms of the time that were created by male artists.[21]

Her earliest known female nude was executed in 1892.[22]In 1895, the art dealerPaul Durand-Ruelexhibited a group of twelveetchingsby Valadon that show women in various stages of their toilettes.[6]Later, she regularly showed at GalerieBernheim-Jeunein Paris.[23]Valadon was the first woman painter accepted as an exhibitor in the Salon de la Nationale in 1894,[24]which is notable since competition for acceptance was fierce.

She exhibited in the Salon d'Automne from 1909, in the Salon des Independants from 1911, and in the Salon des Femmes Artistes Modernes during 1933-1938.[25]Notably,Degaswas the first person to purchase drawings from her,[26]and he introduced her to other collectors, includingPaul Durand-RuelandAmbroise Vollard.Degas also taught her the skill of soft-ground etching.[27]

Casting the Net(1914), by Suzanne Valadon, Museum of Fine Arts Nancy

After her marriage to the well-to-do banker Paul Mousis, in 1896 Valadon became a full-time painter.[6]She made a shift from drawing to painting in 1909.[28]Her first large oils for the Salon related to sexual pleasures and they were some of the first examples in modern painting with a man being an object of desire by a woman similar to that idealized treatment of women by male artists. These notable Salon paintings includeAdam and Eve(Adam et Eve) (1909),Joy of Life(La Joie de vivre) (1911), andCasting the Net(Lancement du filet) (1914).[29]In her lifetime, Valadon produced approximately 273 drawings, 478 paintings, and 31 etchings, excluding pieces given away or destroyed.[30]

Valadon was well known during her lifetime, especially toward the end of her career, in the 1920s more specifically, as she helped to transform the female nude that depicted expression through a woman's experience.[31][page needed].[32]Her works are in the collection of theCentre Georges Pompidouin Paris, theMuseum of Grenoble,and theMetropolitan Museum of Artin New York, among others.

Valadon's painting of an acrobat, L' Acrobate ou La Roue, sold in 2017 for £75,000 by Christie's Auction House.[33]

Style

The Abandoned Doll(1921), by Suzanne Valadon,National Museum of Women in the Arts

Valadon was not confined to a specific style, yet both Symbolist and Post-Impressionist aesthetics are clearly demonstrated within her work.[34]She worked primarily with oil paint, oil pencils, pastels, and red chalk; she did not use ink or watercolor because these mediums were too fluid for her preference.[35]Valadon's paintings feature rich colors and bold, open brushwork often featuring firm black lines to define and outline her figures.[1]

Valadon's self-portraits, portraits, nudes, landscapes, and still lifes remain detached from trends and contemporaneous aspects of academic art.[36]The subjects of Valadon's paintings often reinvent the old master themes: women bathing, reclining nudes, and interior scenes. She preferred to paint working-class models. Art historian Patricia Mathews suggests that Valadon's working-class status and experience as a model influenced her intimate, familiar observation of these women and their bodies. In this respect she differed fromBerthe MorisotandMary Cassatt,who painted mostly women, but "remained well within the bounds of propriety in their subject matter" because of their upper-middle-class status in French society.[31][page needed]Valadon's marginalized status allowed her to enter the contemporary male dominated domain of art through modeling and her lack of formal academic training may have made her less influenced by academic conventions.[37]She has been noted for that difference in her paintings of the nude women.[38]She resisted typical depictions of women, emphasizing class trappings and their sexual attractiveness, through her realistic depiction of unidealised and self-possessed women who are not overly sexualised.[39]She also painted many nude self-portraits across the span of her career, the later of which displayed her aging body realistically.

Valadon emphasized the importance of the composition of her portraits over techniques such as painting expressive eyes.[35]Her later works, such asBlue Room(1923), are brighter in color and show a new emphasis on decorative backgrounds and patterned materials.[40]

Personal life

Santiago Rusiñol,Summer shower,1891. Suzanne Valadon andMiquel Utrilloin the studio of Rusiñol

In 1883, aged 18, Valadon gave birth to a son,Maurice Utrillo.[1]Valadon's mother cared for Maurice while she returned to modelling.[14]Later, Valadon's friendMiquel Utrillosigned papers recognizing Maurice as his son, although the true paternity was never disclosed.[41]

In 1893, Valadon began a short-lived affair with composerErik Satie,moving to a room next to his on theRue Cortot.Satie became obsessed with her, calling her hisBiqui,writing impassioned notes about "her whole being, lovely eyes, gentle hands, and tiny feet". After six months she left, leaving him devastated.[42]

Valadon married the stockbroker Paul Mousis in 1895. For 13 years, she lived with him in an apartment in Paris and in a house in the outlying region.[35]In 1909, Valadon began an affair with the painterAndré Utter,a 23-year-old friend of her son. He became a model for her and appears as Adam inAdam et Eve,which was painted that year. She divorced Moussis in 1913.[43]Valadon then married Utter in 1914.[6]Utter managed her career as well as that of her son.[44]Valadon and Utter regularly exhibited work together until the couple divorced in 1934, when Valadon was almost seventy.[44]They continued a relationship until her death, nonetheless, and are buried together in theSaint Ouen cemeteryinParis.

Suzanne Valadon died of astroke[45]on 7 April 1938, at the age of 72, and was buried in Division 13 of theCimetière de Saint-Ouen,Paris. Among those in attendance at the funeral were her friends and colleaguesAndré Derain,Pablo Picasso,andGeorges Braque.

Exhibitions

Group exhibitions

After her death in 1938

  • 1940, 22nd Biennale Internationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris
  • 1949, Great Trends in Contemporary Painting from Manet to our Day,Musée des Beaux-Arts,Lyons; 1961, Maurice Utrillo V. Suzanne Valadon,Haus der Kunst,Munich
  • 1964, Documenta, Kassel
  • 1969, Fourteenth Salon de Montrouge
  • 1976, Women Artists (1550-1950),Los Angeles County Museum of Art
  • 1979, Maurice Utrillo, Suzanne Valadon,Musée Toulouse-Lautrec
  • 1991, Albi: Utrillo, Valadon, Utter, Chateau Constant, Bessines
  • 1991, Utrillo, Valadon, Utter: la Trilogie Maudite, Acropolis, Nice

Solo exhibitions

  • 1911, the firstsolo exhibitionof the work of Suzanne Valadon, at the Galerie Clovis Sagot
  • 1915, Galerie Berthe Weill, Paris
  • 1919, Galerie Berthe Weill, Paris
  • 1922, Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris
  • 1923, Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris
  • 1927, retrospective, Galerie Berthe Weill, Paris
  • 1928, Galerie des Archers, Lyons
  • 1928, Galerie Berthe Weill, Paris
  • 1929, Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris
  • 1929, Galerie Bernier, Paris
  • 1931, Galerie Le Portique, Paris
  • 1931, Galerie Le Centaure, Brussels
  • 1932, Galerie Le Portique, Paris
  • 1932, retrospective with a preface byÉdouard Herriot,Galerie Georges Petit, Paris
  • 1937, Galerie Bernier, Paris
  • 1938, Galerie Pétridès, Paris
  • 1939, Galerie Bernier, Paris
  • 1942, Galerie Pétridès, Paris
  • 1947, Galerie Bernier, Paris
  • 1947, Galerie Pétridès, Paris
  • 1948, Tribute to Suzanne Valadon,Musée National d'Art Moderne,Paris
  • 1956, The Lefevre Gallery, London
  • 1959, Galerie Pétridès, Paris
  • 1962, Galerie Pétridès, Paris
  • 1967,Musée National d'Art Moderne,Paris
  • 1996, Suzanne Valadon, Pierre Gianada Foundation, Martigny
  • 2021,Barnes Foundation,September 26, 2021 to January 9, 2022, first major U.S. solo exhibition of Valadon's work[46][47][48][49]
  • 2022, Glyptoteket, Copenhagen

Permanent collections

Artwork by Valadon

Portraits of Valadon

Illustrations

  • Jean Cocteau,Bertrand Guégan (1892-1943);L'almanach de Cocagne pour l'an 1920-1922, Dédié aux vrais Gourmands Et aux Francs Buveurs[70]

Feminist commentary

As one of the best documented French artists of the early twentieth century, Valadon's body of work has been of great interest to feminist art historians,[71][better source needed]especially given her focus on the female form. Her work was candid and occasionally awkward, often characterized by strong lines, and her resistance to both academic and avant-garde conventions for representing the female nude have encouraged interest in her work: It has been argued that many of her images of women signal a form of resistance to some of the dominant representations of female sexuality in early twentieth-century Western art. Many of her nudes painted from the 1910s onward are heavily proportioned and sometimes awkwardly posed. The feminist critics assert that they are conspicuously at odds with the svelte, 'feminine' type to be found in the imagery of both popular and 'high' art.[72]Her self-portrait from 1931, when she was 66, stands out as one of the early examples of a woman painter recording her own physical decline.[73]

Like many other talented female artists, although she is known to have been an important modern artist, Valadon never had been given a solo exhibition by a U.S. art institution. Her first institutional solo exhibition in the U.S., at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, was scheduled to open in September 2021.[18]

Honors and legacy

Both an asteroid (6937 Valadon) and acrater on Venusare named in her honor.

The small square at the base of theMontmartre funicularin Paris is named Place Suzanne Valadon. At the top of the funicular, and less than 50 meters to its east, are the steps named rue Maurice Utrillo after her son the artist.

Depiction in novels and plays

A novel based on the life of Suzanne Valadon was written by Elaine Todd Koren and was published in 2001, titledSuzanne: of Love and Art.[74]An earlier novel by Sarah Baylis,Utrillo's Mother,was published first in England and later in the United States.Timberlake Wertenbaker's play,The Line(2009), traces the relationship between Valadon and Degas.[75]Several have speculated Valadon was the basis for the character Suzanne Rouvier in theW. Somerset Maugham's 1944 novelThe Razor's Edge.[76][77][78][79][80]There were many parallels between Valadon's life and that of the Rouvier character.[81][77]

See also

  • Musée de Montmartre,established in the building in which Valadon had an apartment and studio, which are preserved

References

Citations

  1. ^abcdMarchesseau 1996,p. 9.
  2. ^abcWarnod 1981,p. 40.
  3. ^"Suzanne Valadon".The Art Story Foundation.Retrieved17 March2023.
  4. ^Adler, Laura (2019).The Trouble with Women Artists: Reframing the History of Art.Paris: Flammarion. p. 51.ISBN978-2-08-020370-0.
  5. ^Warnod 1981,p. 13.
  6. ^abcdefgGiraudon 2003.
  7. ^"Suzanne Valadon".National Museum of Women in the Arts.Retrieved20 December2012.
  8. ^"Suzanne Valadon".Encyclopedia Britannica.Retrieved17 March2023.
  9. ^Rose 1999,p. 9.
  10. ^"Suzanne Valadon, la pintora que dio luz a los posimpresionistas"(in Spanish), Carlos Sala,La Razón,31 May 2020, updated 13-10-2021. [Retrieved 18-01-2022].
  11. ^Marchesseau 1996,p. 14.
  12. ^Drees, Della (13 March 2016)."Valadon and her studio in Montmartre".Retrieved20 August2018.
  13. ^Gimferrer, Pere (1990).Toulouse-Lautrec.New York: Rizzoli.ISBN978-0-8478-1276-9.OCLC22422605.[page needed]
  14. ^abMarchesseau 1996,p. 15.
  15. ^Iskin, Ruth (7 January 2004)."Review ofThe Nude in French Art and Culture, 1870-1910by Heather Dawkins ".Caa.reviews.College Art Association.doi:10.3202/caa.reviews.2004.1.ISSN1543-950X.
  16. ^Smee, Sebastian."At MFA, dancing the night away in the arms of Renoir".The Boston Globe.Retrieved10 April2013.
  17. ^"Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec".Harvard Art Museums.Retrieved20 December2012.
  18. ^abJacqui Palumbo (8 February 2021)."This rebellious female painter of bold nude portraits has been overlooked for a century".CNN.Retrieved9 February2021.
  19. ^Warnod 1981,pp. 48, 57.
  20. ^Burns 1993,pp. 25–46.
  21. ^Betterton, Rosemary (Spring 1985). "How Do Women Look? The Female Nude in the Work of Suzanne Valadon".Feminist Review.19:3–24 [4].doi:10.1057/fr.1985.2.S2CID144064933.
  22. ^Rose 1999,p. 97.
  23. ^"Suzanne Valadon".Brooklyn Museum of Art.Retrieved20 December2012.
  24. ^Sowerwine, Charles (2018) [2001].France Since 1870: Culture, Politics and Society(3rd ed.). London: Palgrave. p.9495.ISBN978-1-137-40611-8.OCLC1051356006– via Google Books partial preview.
  25. ^Gaze 1997,p. 1384.
  26. ^Warnod 1981,p. 51.
  27. ^Warnod 1981,p. 55.
  28. ^Marchesseau 1996,p. 17.
  29. ^Marchesseau 1996,pp. 18–19.
  30. ^Hewitt 2018,p. 388.
  31. ^abMathews 1991.
  32. ^"Suzanne Valadon".National Museum of Women in the Arts.Retrieved17 March2023.
  33. ^"Suzanne Valadon".L' Acrobate ou La Roue.Retrieved7 February2023.
  34. ^Dolan, Threse (2001)."Passionate Discontent: Creativity, Gender and French Symbolist Art".CAA Reviews.doi:10.3202/caa.reviews.2001.83.
  35. ^abcMarchesseau 1996,p. 16.
  36. ^Marchesseau 1996,pp. 9, 11.
  37. ^Gaze 1997,pp. 1385–1386.
  38. ^Mathews 1991,p. 418.
  39. ^Mathews 1991,pp. 416, 419, 423.
  40. ^"Suzanne Valadon".Museum of Modern Art.Retrieved7 March2013.
  41. ^Warnod 1981,p. 48.
  42. ^Fogwall, Niclas."Suzanne Valadon".Akademiska Föreningen,Lund University.Archived fromthe originalon 3 October 2010.Retrieved12 June2010.
  43. ^Marchesseau 1996,pp. 17–18.
  44. ^abJiminez 2013,p. 529.
  45. ^Warnod 1981,p. 88.
  46. ^"Suzanne Valadon: An Artist on View Webinar | Washington DC".washington.org.Retrieved8 February2021.
  47. ^"The Barnes Foundation PresentsSuzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel".Barnes Foundation.7 June 2021.Retrieved8 August2021.
  48. ^"Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel".Barnes Foundation.
  49. ^Naves, Mario (22 September 2017)."Exhibition note".The New Criterion.Retrieved21 October2021.
  50. ^"La Mère et l'enfant à toilette (Mother and Child at Bath) | Albright-Knox".www.albrightknox.org.Retrieved19 February2021.
  51. ^"print | British Museum".The British Museum.Retrieved19 February2021.
  52. ^"Still Life with Fruit".CMOA Collection.Retrieved15 November2021.
  53. ^"Portrait of Utrillo in profile (Portrait d'Utrillo de Profil) - DMA Collection Online".www.dma.org.Retrieved19 February2021.
  54. ^"The Bath".www.dia.org.Retrieved19 February2021.
  55. ^"Toilette de deux enfant dans le jardin - Suzanne Valadon".FAMSF Search the Collections.8 May 2015.
  56. ^Harvard."From the Harvard Art Museums' collections The Hangover (Suzanne Valadon)".harvardartmuseums.org.Retrieved19 February2021.
  57. ^"untitled (Man with Hat)".Indianapolis Museum of Art Online Collection.Retrieved19 February2021.
  58. ^"results for 'Suzanne Valadon'".New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  59. ^"Women, Suzanne Valadon ^ Minneapolis Institute of Art".collections.artsmia.org.
  60. ^"Oeuvre: Précisions - Nu au châle bleu | Musée Unterlinden".Musée Unterlinden - WebMuseo(in French).Retrieved19 February2021.
  61. ^"Marie Coca et sa fille | Musée des Beaux Arts".www.mba-lyon.fr.
  62. ^"Works by Suzanne Valadon in the MFAH Collections".The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
  63. ^"Suzanne Valadon".The Museum of Modern Art.
  64. ^"Suzanne Valadon | National Museum of Women in the Arts".nmwa.org.
  65. ^"Untitled (Still Life)".art.nelson-atkins.org.Retrieved19 February2021.
  66. ^Michalska, Magda (23 September 2016)."Suzanne Valadon: The Mistress Of Montmartre".DailyArtMagazine.com - Art History Stories.
  67. ^"Digital Collection | The Rose Art Museum | Brandeis University - Young Girl (Jeune Fille)".rosecollection.brandeis.edu.Retrieved19 February2021.
  68. ^"Works | Suzanne Valadon | People | Smart Museum of Art | The University of Chicago".smartcollection.uchicago.edu.Retrieved19 February2021.
  69. ^"Exchange: Bather Seated".exchange.umma.umich.edu.Retrieved19 February2021.
  70. ^NoticeWorldCat;sudoc;BnF.Engraved on wood and unpublished drawings of:Matisse,J. Marchand,R. Dufy,Sonia Lewitska,de Segonzac,Jean Émile Laboureur,Friesz,Marquet,Pierre Laprade,Signac,Louis Latapie, Suzanne Valadon,Henriette Tirmanand others.'
  71. ^"Inspired by Art Herstory: Suzanne Valadon's" The Blue Room "(1923)".The Closet Feminist.11 September 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 4 April 2019.Retrieved16 November2021.
  72. ^Gaze 1997,p. 1386.
  73. ^Bonazzoli, Francesca; Robecchi, Michele (2020).Portraits unmasked: the stories behind the faces.Munich; New York: Prestel. pp. 84–87.ISBN978-3-7913-8620-1.OCLC1184016102.
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Further reading