French, 1921 - 2023
A French artist of the post-World War II School of Paris, Françoise Gilot was perhaps most famous as a muse and lover to Pablo Picasso. While her story may be inextricably linked to 20th century art’s most towering figure, Gilot’s remarkable life and vast oeuvre deserves recognition on its own merits. In a career spanning over seven decades, Gilot’s distinct language of form and color revealed an enduring preoccupation with both the personal and universal forces of nature, time, space and mythology.
Born in 1921 in a Paris suburb, Gilot evinced an early love for the arts, deciding at age five that she would become a painter. She was mentored by the surrealist Endre Rozsda, and had her first major exhibition in Paris in 1943. That same year, Gilot, then 21, met the 61-year-old Picasso, and the two began a decade-long relationship resulting in the births of two children, Claude and Paloma. During this time, Gilot exerted a profound influence on Picasso’s work, with his biographer John Richardson acknowledging that “[he] took from her rather more than she took from him.” In 1964, eleven years after the relationship’s dissolution, Gilot published Life with Picasso, a complicated portrait of life in the orbit of genius, which sold over one million copies in its first year.
In 1969, Gilot met Dr. Jonas Salk, renowned for discovering the polio vaccine, and the two were soon married. They remained together until his death in 1995. During this period, Gilot maintained studios in La Jolla, New York and Paris. Her style evolved toward a greater interest in highly saturated color and formal composition, and she began experimenting with lithographs and aquatints.
In 2010, Gilot was made an Officer of the Legion d’Honneur, the French government’s highest honor for the arts. Gilot lived and worked in New York City and continued to exhibit internationally until her death.
Born in 1921 in a Paris suburb, Gilot evinced an early love for the arts, deciding at age five that she would become a painter. She was mentored by the surrealist Endre Rozsda, and had her first major exhibition in Paris in 1943. That same year, Gilot, then 21, met the 61-year-old Picasso, and the two began a decade-long relationship resulting in the births of two children, Claude and Paloma. During this time, Gilot exerted a profound influence on Picasso’s work, with his biographer John Richardson acknowledging that “[he] took from her rather more than she took from him.” In 1964, eleven years after the relationship’s dissolution, Gilot published Life with Picasso, a complicated portrait of life in the orbit of genius, which sold over one million copies in its first year.
In 1969, Gilot met Dr. Jonas Salk, renowned for discovering the polio vaccine, and the two were soon married. They remained together until his death in 1995. During this period, Gilot maintained studios in La Jolla, New York and Paris. Her style evolved toward a greater interest in highly saturated color and formal composition, and she began experimenting with lithographs and aquatints.
In 2010, Gilot was made an Officer of the Legion d’Honneur, the French government’s highest honor for the arts. Gilot lived and worked in New York City and continued to exhibit internationally until her death.