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France, c. 1975
woven jute 86 h × 57 w in (218 × 145 cm)
woven jute 86 h × 57 w in (218 × 145 cm)
estimate: $5,000–7,000
result: $35,000
follow artist
Woven signature to lower edge: [NIKI AP-2].
Niki de Saint Phalle 1930–2002
Niki de Saint Phalle was born Catherine-Marie-Agnès-Brandon Fal de Saint Phalle in France in 1930 to an upper-class Franco-American family. They lost their wealth during the Great Depression and moved to the United States in 1933. Saint Phalle attended the Brearley School in New York City until she was expelled for defacing statues on the school’s campus (she painted the fig leaves on nude figures an offending red). She was later sent to the Oldfields School in Maryland and graduated in 1947. After school, she modeled for Vogue and Life magazine, married a childhood friend when she was 18 and became a mother two years later.
In 1952 Saint Phalle and her husband moved back to Paris, where he studied music and she studied theater. The following year, after a period of intensive travel throughout Europe, she suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized; she took up painting to help with her recovery. In 1955 the family again moved, this time to Mallorca and Saint Phalle gave birth to her second child. While in Mallorca, she was exposed to the architecture of Antonio Gaudí, who would become a major influence for the imaginative style and ambitious scale of her work.
Saint Phalle returned to Paris in the late 1950s and she and her husband separated in 1960. She quickly established a studio, met artist Jean Tinguely who she’d have a long-term artistic and romantic relationship with and became part of the Nouveau Réalisme group that included Tinguely, Christo, Yves Klein, Arman and other artists working from the inspiration of Dadaism with an iconoclastic approach to artmaking. She became part of the artistic milieu, being friendly with Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Marcel Duchamp and Salvador Dalí and held her first solo exhibition in 1961. During this time, she was creating her Tirs (Shoot) paintings, which were participatory performances where she and others took turns shooting at canvases covered with plaster balloons full of paint.
In the mid-1960s she began creating her most well-known and celebrated series of works, the Nanas, which were meditations on both the exalted and disparaged position women held in society (“nanas” in French is a slang term meaning “broads”). She was inspired to make these works after a visit with Clarice Rivers, the wife of the artist Larry Rivers who was a close friend and also pregnant at the time. Saint Phalle’s Nanas are expressive, exuberant, archetypal, cartoonish, engaging, fertile and imaginative. In the 1970s she began working on a more monumental scale, creating public sculptures, sculptural environments and buildings. In 1979, the foundations were laid for the Tarot Garden in Tuscany, which featured twenty-two sculptures over 14 acres and was completed in 1998. In 1982 she finished The Empress, an imposing sculptural building that she lived and worked in for the next ten years. Throughout the 1980s she returned to her Nanas and also began making kinetic sculptures in the 1990s as homage to Tinguely after his death in 1991.
Saint Phalle’s work combined mediums in new ways, blending and dismantling hierarchies between painting, sculpture, and performance. She also brought exuberance for the female body and spirit to the forefront of her work, when many of her contemporaries were working in a stark, modernist, masculine style. She died in 2002 due to complications stemming from the toxicity of the materials she used to create her singular and visionary body of work. She was 71.
Auction Results Niki de Saint Phalle