Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 5

Niki de Saint Phalle
Brooch (Oiseau)

2005

About the Item

Niki de Saint Phalle Brooch (Oiseau), ca. 2005 Zamak, gold tone finished, nickel free (Incised Signature) Incised signature on the back of the jewelry (Niki De Saint Phalle) and the clasp (Niki). 2 3/10 × 1 3/5 inches Authorized by the Estate of Niki de Saint Phalle! This colorful, whimsical piece - "Oiseau" (Bird) can be worn both as a brooch and as a necklace. Bears the Niki de Saint Phalle's incised signature. Collectible work. Makes a terrific gift. Biography of Niki de Saint Phalle Childhood Niki de Saint Phalle was born in France in 1930 to an aristocratic Catholic family. She had an American mother, a French banker father, four siblings, and grew up bilingual in French and English. Her father lost his wealth during the Great Depression and the family moved to the US in 1933, where Saint Phalle attended Brearley School, a girls' school in New York City. Saint Phalle reported later in her life, in an autobiography titled Mon Secret (1994), that her father had sexually abused her from age 11. From an early age, Saint Phalle pushed boundaries in her artistic and personal life. Though she found Brearley School to be a formative experience, later claiming that it was there she became a feminist, she was expelled for painting the fig leaves covering the genitals of statues on the school's campus red. She then attended Oldfields School in Maryland, graduating in 1947. As a young woman, Saint Phalle also worked as a model, appearing on the front covers of Life Magazine and Vogue. When she was 18, Saint Phalle eloped with Henry Matthews, an author and childhood friend. While Matthews studied music at Harvard University, Saint Phalle began to explore painting, and gave birth to her daughter Laura in 1951, when she was 20 years old. Early Training and work In 1952, the Matthews and Saint Phalle moved to Paris, where he continued to study music and Saint Phalle studied theater. The couple traveled extensively in Europe, gaining exposure to art by the Old Masters. The following year, Saint Phalle was diagnosed with a "nervous breakdown" and hospitalized in a psychiatric facility. She was encouraged to paint as a form of therapy, and consequently gave up her theater studies in favor of becoming an artist. The couple moved to Mallorca off the coast of Spain, where their son Philip was born in 1955. During this time, Saint Phalle developed her imaginative, self-taught style of painting, experimenting with a variety of forms and materials. She also discovered the architecture of Antonio Gaudi, which had a strong influence on her work. Gaudi's Park Guell in Barcelona was instrumental in Saint Phalle's early conceptualization of the elaborate sculpture garden she would fulfill much later in her career. Mature Period At the end of the 1950s, Saint Phalle and her husband moved back to Paris. In 1960, however, the couple separated and Saint Phalle moved to a new apartment, established a studio, and met artist Jean Tinguely, with whom she would collaborate artistically. Within a year, they had moved in together and begun a romantic relationship. Saint Phalle became part of the Nouveau Réalisme movement along with Tinguely, Yves Klein, Arman and others. She was the only woman in the group. Her first solo exhibition in 1961 punctuated a dynamic period of Saint Phalle's early career, and she met a number of influential artists living in Paris at the time, such as Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, whose use of found objects was to have a strong influence on Saint Phalle's work. She was also friendly with Marcel Duchamp, who first introduced her and Tinguely to Salvador Dalí. The three artists traveled to Spain together to an event celebrating Dali's work, in which a life-sized bull sculpture was detonated with fireworks. In 1963, Tinguely and Saint Phalle moved to an old house just outside Paris, where she began to work on architectural projects as well as her renowned shooting paintings. In 1971, she designed her first building (a residence in the south of France), traveled to India and Egypt to study Eastern architecture, and married Tinguely. Her most famous and prolific series of works, the Nanas, were begun in the mid-1960s and inspired by a friend's pregnancy, her reflections on archetypal feminine forms, and the vexed positions that women occupy in modern, patriarchal societies. 'Nanas,' a French slang word roughly equivalent to 'broads,' is a title that encapsulates the theme of the everywoman as well as the casual denigration that closely accompanies the rhetorical grouping of women as a social category. In 1974, Saint Phalle suffered from a serious lung illness and was advised by her doctors to spend some time in Switzerland to recuperate. While she was there, she met childhood friend Marella Caracciolo Agnelli, who was then the wife of Fiat chairman Gianni Agnelli. Marella was a well-connected socialite with a penchant for collecting art, and Saint Phalle told her about her vision of creating an elaborate sculpture garden of Tarot symbology. Caracciolo Agnelli proposed an area of land in Tuscany as a site, and initiated the garden work that would define the next 20 years of Saint Phalle's artistic efforts. Late Period In 1978, the foundations were laid for the Tarot Garden, and Saint Phalle created the first sculptural models for it. Construction began on the first large-scale sculpture in 1980, and in 1982 Saint Phalle completed The Empress, a sculptural building designed in the shaped of a sphinx. This structure became her studio and home for the next decade. Saint Phalle was one of the first artists to get involved in AIDS outreach and prevention programs in the 1980s, designing prints to raise awareness about the disease. The 1980s were also the most prolific period in the Nanas series, and marked a time when her interests in the cultural and biological systems constructing femininity were their most intricately developed. Jean Tinguely died in Switzerland in 1991, and Saint Phalle began to make a series of kinetic sculptures, his chief sculptural medium, to honor his memory. In 1994, Saint Phalle moved away from Tuscany to live in La Jolla in California. She lived there until her death in 2002. The Legacy of Niki de Saint Phalle The Nouveau Realisme movement, and Niki de Saint Phalle's work in particular, had a significant effect on the development of conceptual art. Her works often combined performance and plastic art in new ways, blending and dismantling hierarchies between painting, sculpture, and performance in a way that would influence conceptual artists such as Joseph Beuys and Lawrence Weiner. She performed some of her Shooting Pictures for Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Ed Ruscha and Larry Bell, and influenced their thinking toward developing new and hybrid forms rather than refining single medium-specificity. As a feminist, Saint Phalle's unique style championed the female body and female sexuality. Her work would inspire generations of women artists working with the problem and challenge of representing the female body (notably, Louise Bourgeois' ambiguous, supple fabric sculptures of female forms). Saint Phalle also left behind a significant legacy of public sculpture, both in her Tarot Garden in Tuscany and in other locations around the world. -The Art Story
More From This SellerView All
  • Red Dog (limited edition print with gold foil) by famous Street Art Pop Artists
    By Faile
    Located in New York, NY
    FAILE Red Dog, 2018 Offset Print with gold foil on Lenox 100 paper. Faile studio stamp on the back Annotated and hand signed in pencil on the lower front with studio stamp on the bac...
    Category

    2010s Street Art Animal Prints

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Limited Edition Docket Purse
    By Tracey Emin
    Located in New York, NY
    Tracey Emin Limited Edition Docket Purse, 2011 Leather purse with zipper with original price tag in Selfridges bag 3 3/5 × 3 3/5 × 3/10 inches Edition 40/100 Signed in plate, Bears Tracey Emin's authorized signature and date (2011) incised in leather; stamp numbered 40/100; w/original Selfridges price tag and bag Fans of Tracey Emin know that she called Docket, her beloved cat, the true love of her life. This limited edition purse...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Animal Prints

    Materials

    Mixed Media, Leather

  • Stracotto alla Fiorentina - Beppe - New York City
    By Andres Serrano
    Located in New York, NY
    Andres Serrano Stracotto alla Fiorentina - Beppe - New York City, 2000 Ceramic Plate. Artist Signature Fired into Plate. Artist signature fired into the plate on the front and back and numbered 95 from the edition of only 100. 10 1/8 in diameter Unframed This striking, extremely rare limited edition, signed and numbered bowl/plate was handmade in southern Italy by master artisans near Vietri sul Mare. It was designed by renowned American artist Andres Serrano. From the late 1990s through the millenium. Buon Ricordo...
    Category

    Early 2000s Contemporary Mixed Media

    Materials

    Ceramic, Mixed Media, Screen

  • rare Maeght sculpted holiday card 1968 - collectors item mid century modern art
    By Alexander Calder
    Located in New York, NY
    Alexander Calder rare Maeght sculpted holiday card, 1968 Hand made sculpted paper collage on paper with embossing Embossed artist's monogram 10 × 7 × 6 1/2 inches This rare, fold-ou...
    Category

    1960s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Paper, Mixed Media, Laid Paper, Lithograph, Offset

  • Horse and Rider sculpture (with original red box)
    By Tom Otterness
    Located in New York, NY
    Tom Otterness Horse and Rider Maquette, 2003 Black Resin Sculpture held in original box 5 1/2 × 3 1/2 × 2 inches Held in original vintage box This rare, highly collectible, limited e...
    Category

    Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Resin, Mixed Media

  • Hourglass (blue): glass sculpture sand, cast camera & quartz crystal; New in box
    By Daniel Arsham
    Located in New York, NY
    DANIEL ARSHAM Hourglass (Blue), 2019 Glass, sand, cast miniature camera and quartz crystal in opaque white resin accompanied by its original box with guara...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

    Materials

    Glass, Resin, Plaster, Mixed Media, Plastic, Cardboard

You May Also Like
  • Signed KAWS Companion 2015 ( KAWS lane crawford)
    By KAWS
    Located in NEW YORK, NY
    Signed KAWS Plush Companion: This well sized, 16.5" tall, brown KAWS plush Companion was published on the occasion of KAWS 2015 exhibition and collaboration with the Chinese department store, Lane Crawford...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Pop Art Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Cotton

  • "Chunjeein 1, 2 & 3" (Triptych) Contemporary Korean Textile Wall Sculptures
    By Chang Yeonsoon
    Located in Wilton, CT
    "Chunjeein-1, 2 & 3", 33” x 7 1/8” x 6 3/4” (total installed dimensions), 2019 This three-piece work of abaca fiber, pure gold leaf and eco-soluble resin is by Chang Yeonsoon (b. 1950), a Korean...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • No. 55 (Book of Changes), Contemporary Fiber Wall Sculpture by Eva Vargö
    By Eva Vargö
    Located in Wilton, CT
    Eva Vargo fuses paper and linen-thread materials into her weaving techniques. No. 55 (Book of Changes) was hand woven with linen, thread, paper strings and g...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • "I Remember" Norma Minkowitz, Contemporary mixed media textile sculpture
    By Norma Minkowitz
    Located in Wilton, CT
    This mixed media textile sculpture was done by American fiber artist, Norma Minkowitz (b. 1937). The interlacing technique that Minkowitz uses as seen ...
    Category

    Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Metal

  • Rococo Diptych
    Located in Boston, MA
    Artist Commentary: This diptych started several years ago during a public art performance called Nike's Advice. I painted 130 feet of unprimed canvas with the public. It was scary! I don't consider myself a painter. I was having to accept Nike's Advice myself ... as in "Just Do It". Later, I used my sewing machine to stitch decorative lines. Gold-leaf was added before the surface was coated in UV filtering epoxy. The works are mounted with copper roofing nails to a stretcher bar with gold painted sides. Keywords: painted textile, abstract, mixed media Artist Biography: Susan Lenz...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • "Wild in the Woods" abstract horse, mixed media textile sculpture
    By Norma Minkowitz
    Located in Wilton, CT
    "Wild in the Woods" fiber, wood, mixed media, 40 x 11 x 16, 1997. This mixed media textile sculpture was done by American fiber artist, Norma Minkowitz (b. 1937). The interlacing te...
    Category

    1990s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Textile, Thread, Mixed Media, Wood

Recently Viewed

View All