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French artist and Picasso's one-time muse Françoise Gilot dies aged 101

AFP
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French artist and Picasso's one-time muse Françoise Gilot dies aged 101
Artist Françoise Gilot in 2004. AFP PHOTO JEAN-PIERRE MULLER (Photo by JEAN-PIERRE MULLER / AFP)

French-born artist Françoise Gilot was a rising star of the art scene in Paris when she met Picasso in 1943

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The Picasso Museum in Paris confirmed her death at the age of 101 to AFP, after the New York Times reported Gilot had passed away following recent heart and lung ailments.

"Pablo was the greatest love of my life, but you had to take steps to protect yourself. I did, I left before I was destroyed," she confided in Janet Hawley's 2021 book Artists and Conversation, in which she explained why she had walked out on him with their two children after a 10-year relationship.

"The others didn't. They clung on to the mighty Minotaur and paid a heavy price," she said, referring to Picasso's first wife, dancer Olga Khokhlova, who lapsed into depression after he left her; his former teen lover, Marie-Therese Walter, who hanged herself; his second wife Jacqueline Roque, who shot herself; and his best-known muse, artist Dora Maar, who had a nervous
breakdown.

She described the painter of Guernica as, "astonishingly creative, a magician, so intelligent and seductive ... But he was also very cruel, sadistic and merciless to others, as well as to himself."

Gilot was 21 and a rising star of the Parisian art scene when she first met Picasso, 40 years her senior and married to Russian dancer Khokhlova, in occupied France during World War II. At the time of the meeting he was also the lover of French photographer, painter and poet Maar.

The meeting took place in a Paris restaurant in the spring of 1943 when he brought a bowl of cherries to her table and invited her to visit his studio.

They never married but had two children, a son, Claude, born in 1947, and a daughter, Paloma, in 1949.

He often painted her, portraying her as the radiant and haughty Woman-Flower in 1946. In Femme assise (1949), which sold for £8.5million ($9.6 million) at auction in London in 2012, he depicted her while heavily pregnant with Paloma.

When she walked out on him in 1953 and resumed her own artistic career, he told her she was headed "straight for the desert". From that time on, his entourage snubbed her and her work.

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"In France things had got rather difficult for me... leaving Picasso was seen as a big crime and I was no longer welcome," she was quoted as saying by Sotheby's in 2021.

She became a US citizen and did not attend his funeral in 1973.

Respected artist
Born on November 26, 1921, at Neuilly-sur-Seine to the west of Paris to a well-to-do family, she followed in her mother's footsteps starting out as a watercolour artist, before moving on to drawing and painting.

Her parents wanted her to become a lawyer, but she abandoned her studies at the age of 19. By 21 she was already one of the most respected artists of the emerging School of Paris, which grouped French and emigre artists in the capital during the first half of the 20th century.

As she developed, she increasingly produced minimalist, colourful works and over her career signed at least 1,600 canvasses and 3,600 works on paper.

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In her 1964 book Life with Picasso she portrayed him as a tyrant. Picasso failed in a legal bid to get the book banned, and retaliated by refusing to see her and their children.

She also wrote a book in 1991 on Picasso's complicated love-hate relationship with the other giant of modern art, Matisse, with whom she was friends.

The two other men in her life were painter Luc Simon, with whom she had a daughter Aurelia, and American virologist Jonas Salk, inventor of the first polio vaccine, whom she married in 1970 and lived with in California until his death in 1995.

Gilot spent the last years of her life in New York, where she continued painting into her nineties.

In 2021 her painting Paloma a la Guitare, a 1965 portrait of her daughter, sold for $1.3million at Sotheby's in London.

Her work graced the walls of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, as well as the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

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