marie raymond - portrait 1948

Marie Raymond

(1908-1989)

Marie Raymond was a French painter and art critic. A prolific and inventive artist, she made a place for herself in the art world of Post-War Paris. She is also the artist Yves Klein’s mother.

Works

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marie raymond - effet de lumiere painting 1960

Effet de lumière – 1960

Oil on canvas
60 x 73 cm / 23.6 x 28.7 in.
Signed “M. Raymond“ lower right
Signed, titled and dated ”M. Raymond 1960 Effet de Lumière“ on reverse

marie raymond - naissance des etoiles painting 1969

Naissance des étoiles – 1969

Oil on paper laid down on canvas
81 x 130 cm – 31.9 x 51.2 in.
Signed “M. Raymond“ lower right
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond NAISSANCE DES ETOILES 1969“ on reverse

marie raymond - effet cosmique painting 1969

Effet cosmique – 1969

Acrylic on canvas
46 x 65 cm – 18.1 x 25.6 in.
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond EFFET COSMIQUE 1969“ on reverse

marie raymond - effet nocturne painting 1969

Effet nocturne – 1969

Acrylic on canvas
38 x 55 cm – 15 x 21.7 in.
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond EFFET NOCTURNE 1969“ on reverse

marie raymond - astres figures painting 1969

Astres figures – 1969

Acrylic on canvas
61 x 50 cm – 24 x 19.7 in.
Signed “M. Raymond“ lower right
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond ASTRES FIGURES 1969“ on reverse

marie raymond - untitled painting 1974

Untitled – c. 1974

Gouache and acrylic on paper laid down on canvas
51 x 65 cm / 20 x 25.5 in.
Signed “M.Raymond” lower right
Signed “M.Raymond” on reverse

marie raymond - painting enfermes dans les formes 1976

Enfermés dans les formes – 1976

Acrylic on canvas
92 x 73 cm / 36.2 x 28.7 in.
Signed, dated and titled “M. Raymond 1976 Enfermés dans les formes” on reverse
Dimensions on reverse “73 x 92”

marie raymond - effet cosmique painting 1979

Effet cosmique – 1979

Acrylic on canvas
46 x 55 cm – 18.1 x 21.7 in.
Signed “M. Raymond“ lower right
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond EFFET COSMIQUE 1979“ on reverse

marie raymond - painting espaces et astres 1981

Espaces et astres – 1981

Acrylic on canvas
54,5 x 65,5 cm – 21.5 x 25.8 in.
Signed, titled and dated “M. Raymond 1981 Espace et astres“ on reverse

marie raymond - painting la reveuse 1984

La rêveuse – 1984

Acrylic on canvas
61 x 50 cm / 24 x 19.6 in.
Signed “M.Raymond” lower right
Titled, signed and dated “La rêveuse – M. Raymond été 84” on the stretcher

Exhibitions

Publications

marie raymond - catalog exhibition 2023 diane de polignac gallery

MARIE RAYMOND
Le royaume invisible
Abstraction-Figures-Astres

Catalog 68 pages – Text by Lucia Pesapane

the 1940 s - exhibition catalog cover

THE 1940s
An abstract renaissance inspired by surrealist practices

Digital publication – Text by Mathilde Gubanski

exhibition catalog - les annees 1970 1980 explosion de la couleur 2021 cover

LES ANNÉES 1970 – 1980
L’EXPLOSION DE LA COULEUR

Digital publication – Text by Mathilde Gubanski

catalog cover - exhibition women in abstract art five women five artistic visions 2021

WOMEN IN ABSTRACT ART:
FIVE WOMEN – FIVE ARTISTIC VISIONS

Digital publication – Text by Mathilde Gubanski

marie raymond - catalog 2019

MARIE RAYMOND
To the light

Catalog 60 pages – Text by Michèle Gazier

Videos

Virtual visit of the exhibition “Women in abstract art: Five women – five artisitic visions”.
From March 8 to May 29, 2021

Presentation of the exhibition “MARIE RAYMOND, to the light”

Artwork analysis

marie raymond - art comes to you 16 newsletter grande lumiere

“Marie Raymond, Grande Lumière”, an analysis by Mathilde Gubanski

marie raymond - newsletter art comes to you 11

“Marie Raymond Organist of Light”, an analysis by Mathilde Gubanski

marie raymond - exhibition le mans 2021 en

AT THE HEART OF ABSTRACTION:
MARIE RAYMOND AND HER FRIENDS

Musée de Tessé, Le Mans, France
From April 10 to September 19. 2021

The Female Painter Marie Raymond’s Years of Studies

Marie Raymond was born on May 4th, 1908 at La Colle-sur-Loup in the south of France, into a Provencal bourgeois family. Her father was a pharmacist and her grandfather was a flower and perfume merchant. Marie Raymond studied in the Blanche de Castille boarding school in Nice. From her adolescence, she practiced yoga, which was still rare in Europe at the time. This unusual interest in yoga and occultism came from her older sister Rose and her husband, a doctor.
Marie Raymond discovered her vocation for painting on visiting the studio of Alexandre Stoppler, a painter based in Cagnes-sur-Mer. He trained the young artist by getting her to paint directly from life. Her memories of the scents, colours and light of the south of France determined the future development of Marie Raymond’s painting. She wrote: “From my early childhood, the memory of playing among mountains of cut roses that my grandfather bought all over the countryside has remained strong.” The south of France attracted a lot of artists, many whom visited Cagnes-sur-Mer to paint. This is how Marie Raymond met the painter Fred Klein whom she married in 1926. She was just eighteen years old.

Two years later, Fred and Marie had a son: Yves Klein. Marie Raymond had the intuition very quickly that her son would be famous: “I was already aware and desired one day to have a son who would be famous. I have always very clearly remembered a phrase from an Opera I heard in Nice. It was Antar, I think, a phrase stayed in my memory that echoed very strongly in me: ‘and one can, with the beat of a wing, fly away to the Sun’, sung of course. And when I consider life, Yves’s momentum, I can’t help finding in it something like the prescience of destiny which was realized, achieved by Yves Klein’s life in its meteoric evolution.”

Marie Raymond’s Life between Paris and the South of France

The Klein family regularly moved back and forth between Paris and the South, between the desire to live in the art world and economic reality. In Montparnasse, they lived a bohemian life among their friends the artists Jacques Villon, František Kupka, and especially Piet Mondrian with whom Marie Raymond shared her studio. As she described: “It was like a family, many brothers who found each other and had fun in endless conversations. I still remember chatting to Mondrian, at the Dancing de la Coupole. I wasn’t yet twenty, he was sixty, but he was so happy to be dancing.” Between the south of France and the Netherlands, another painter influenced Marie Raymond: Van Gogh, whose Gardener she first saw, in the form of a coloured print, at Jacques Villon’s home.

Back in Nice in 1932, Marie and Fred became close to Nicolas de Staël and his first wife, Janine Teslar. The painter Marie Raymond attended classes at the Nice school of decorative arts where she met the sculptor Émile Gilioli. She was awarded the commission for a fresco for the pavilion of the Alpes-Maritimes at the International Exposition of 1937. In 1938, Fred Klein exhibited in Amsterdam and the family took advantage of this to visit the Netherlands. At the start of the war, the family settled in Cagnes-sur-Mer where Marie Raymond started to paint Imaginary Landscapes (1941-1944), inspired by her wanderings in the hinterland; this is when she met Hans Arp and Alberto Magnelli.

At the end of the war, the woman artist Marie Raymond left her post-Surrealist period and chose abstraction definitively: “gradually, you become internalized, you work. I again sensed the need to express something, but what? The sun still shines! But nothing tangible. How do you recompose life? This is how the first step towards abstract painting is taken.” She made herself a place in the Parisian art scene, which was essentially masculine at the time. Until 1954, Marie Raymond opened her apartment- studio every Monday, creating the “Mondays of Marie Raymond” where the gallerists Colette Allendy, Iris Clert, artists Pierre Soulages, Raymond Hains, François Dufrêne, Jacques de la Villeglé, César, Eugène Ionesco, Jean Tinguely, Hans Hartung, and Nina Kandinsky, as well as the critics Charles Estienne, Pierre Restany, and Georges Boudaille would gather. Pierre Soulages said: “We would go, especially in the evening, for a coffee. We were close, Colette and I, and also our friend Hartung who liked Marie’s painting a lot.”
Marie Raymond was also an art critic. She published many articles, especially in the Dutch magazine Kunst en Kultuur for which she was the Paris correspondent from 1939 to 1958.

Recognition for the painter Marie Raymond

In 1945, Marie Raymond participated in her first major exposition at the Salon des Surindépendants. Her work was hung alongside pieces by Hans Hartung, Jean Dewasne, Jean Deyrolle and Gérard Schneider. The following year, Marie Raymond participated in the exhibition La Jeune Peinture Abstraite at the Galerie Denise René. The same year, she exhibited with Serge Poliakoff and Engel Pak at the Centre de Recherches d’Art Abstrait in Paris and then at the first Salon des Réalités Nouvelles. In 1949, she was awarded the Kandinsky Prize with Youla Chapoval and at the Galerie de Beaune an exhibition was held entitled Les gouaches de Marie Raymond. This woman artist also participated in the first São Paolo Biennale in Brazil.

In 1951, Marie Raymond presented her work with Arp, Doméla, Magnelli, Poliakoff, amongst others at the travelling exhibition Klar Form – 20 Artistes de l’École de Paris organized by Denise René. This exhibition travelled to Copenhagen, Helsinki, Stockholm, Oslo and Liège. In 1952, Marie Raymond exhibited at the Salon de Mai. She interviewed Matisse for the Japanese magazine Mizue.
In 1953, the Klein couple exhibited for three days at the Franco-Japanese Institute of Tokyo and at the Bridgestone Museum of Art in Tokyo. Marie was given a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art of Kamakura.
Fred and Marie participated in 1955 in a travelling exhibition of the Der Kreis (The Circle) Group in Austria and Germany. Marie Raymond then exhibited at the Rio de Janeiro Museum of modern art and at the Lausanne Musée Cantonal. In 1957, an important retrospective called Marie Raymond was held at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. In 1960, she entered the Marzotto Prize and won a prize for France with the painter Dimitrienko.

At that time, the painter Marie Raymond’s form of abstraction was luminous and lyrical. “For those who haven’t understood the Abstract process, I will try to give a few indications of my working method. After preparing canvases and colours, I would go outside to penetrate myself with the day’s light, walk, even run a little in the Luxembourg gardens near my home, so as to distance myself from the material gesture. For many years, on coming back home, I would focus by reading a few pages from Bergson’s Creative Evolution, which is so full of images, so poetic. With this backbone: having reached a certain internal rhythm, I approached the canvas. A harmony having been revealed, the next stage was tuning and the rhythm of this internal state reached beyond reality and was experienced internally, something beyond the tangible, a chord with ‘the immaterial’ in summary that Yves made light, later on.”

Then came the difficult years for the artist Marie Raymond. The Kleins separated in 1958 and divorced in 1961. The following year, Yves Klein married Rotraut Uecker and died that year of a heart attack at the age of only thirty-four. Marie Raymond said: “Yves had prepared a painting of gold and still had a bouquet of artificial roses separately, taking the bouquet in his hands, he placed it on the painting and asked me the question: “What does this make you think of?” (…) These paintings, he called them “tombs”. Was it a premonition? Because he was in perfect health and very active: This was in the spring, his wife was expecting their child. Who could have foretold that a few months later, he would be carried off so suddenly, in the prime of life, while accomplishing his work.” Marie Raymond’s father also died of a heart attack in 1963.

The artist Marie Raymond’s painting was changed forever by these experiences. The painter found inspiration again in her passion for esotericism and the Cosmos. From 1964, she painted a series of works that she called Abstraction-Figures-Astres. Marie Raymond exhibited at the Galerie Cavalero in Cannes at the Fondation Maeght at Saint Paul-de-Vence and at the Galerie aux Bateliers in Brussels. In 1966, Daniel Templon opened his first gallery, the Galerie Cimaise Bonaparte, with an exhibition of Marie Raymond. In 1972 a major show of her work and of her son, Yves Klein, was organized at the Château-Musée of Cagnes-sur-Mer. In 1988, the Pascal de Sarthe Gallery in San Francisco dedicated a solo exhibition to Marie Raymond. Three times, works by her were shown at the Centre Pompidou in Paris: in 1977, in the exhibition Paris – New York, in 1981, in the exhibition Paris – Paris, Créations en France 1937 – 1957, and finally in 1988 during the exhibition Les années 50. Marie Raymond died the following year in 1989.

© Diane de Polignac Gallery
Translation: Jane Mac Avock

marie raymond - portrait 1956

Selected Public Collections

Selected Public Collections

Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum

Cagnes-sur-Mer, Château-Musée Grimaldi

Nantes, Musée d’Art

Paris, Centre National des Arts Plastiques

Paris, Centre Pompidou

Tokyo, Bridgestone Museum of Art

Selected exhibitions

Selected Exhibitions

12e Salon des Indépendants, Paris, 1945

Galerie Denise René, Paris, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1975, 1988

Marie Raymond, Engel Pak, Poliakoff, Centre de Recherches d’Art Abstrait, Paris, 1946

Salon des Réalités Nouvelles, Paris, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1958, 1962, 1968

Prise de terres, Peintres et Sculpteur de l’Objectivité, Galerie Breteau, Paris, 1948

Galerie Colette Allendy, Paris, 1949, 1950, 1956

Galerie de Beaune, Paris, 1949, 1950, 1951

Salon de Mai, Paris, 1952, 1961

Marie Raymond Fred Klein, Bridgestone Museum of Art, Tokyo, 1953

Marie Raymond, Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura, 1953

Marie Raymond Garbell Hillaireau Lyrisme de la Couleur, Galerie Art Vivant, Paris, 1953

Marie Raymond, Galerie du Théâtre de Poche, Brussels, 1954

Du futurisme à l’art abstrait, Musée Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, 1955

Marie Raymond, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1957

II Micro-salon di Iris Clert di Iris Clert di Parigi in esclusività per l’Italia, Galerie Apollinaire, Milan, 1957

Galerie Iris Clert, Paris, 1957, 1958

Galerie La Tartaruga, Rome, 1957

Galerie Europe, Brussels, 1959

Marie Raymond, Galerie Cavaléro, Cannes, 1963

Galerie Cimaise Bonaparte, Paris, 1966

Marie Raymond peintures – Dessins, Galerie aux Bateliers, Brussels, 1966

Marie Raymond Yves Klein, Château Musée, Cagnes sur Mer, 1972

1ère Biennale française de la tapisserie en hommage à Jean Lurçat, Palais de l’Europe, Menton, 1975

IIème Biennale Française de la Tapisserie en hommage à Le Corbusier, Palais de Juan-les-Pins, Antibes, 1977

Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, 1977, 1981, 1988

Charles Estienne et l’art à Paris 1945-1966, Centre National des Arts Plastiques, Paris, 1984

La part des femmes dans l’art contemporain, Vitry-sur-Seine, 1984

Aspects de l’art en France de 1950 à 1980, Musée Ingres, Montauban, 1985

Hommage à Iris Clert, Acropolis, Nice, 1986

L’Art en Europe – Les années décisives 1945-1953, Musée d’Art Moderne, Saint-Étienne, 1987

Abstraction expressions – confrontations 1950-1970, Galerie Bernard Davignon, Paris, 1988

Pascal de Sarthe Gallery, San Francisco, 1988, 1991

Marie Raymond, Rétrospective 1937-1987, Musée d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain, Nice, 1993

L’École de Paris – 1945-1964, Musée National d’histoire et d’art, Luxembourg, 1998

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Angers, 2004

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Carcassonne, 2006

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein, Museum Ludwig, Koblenz, 2006

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein, LAAC Dunkerque, Dunkirk, 2007

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein Herencias, Circulo de Bellas Arte, Madrid, 2010

Marie Raymond – Vers la Lumière, Galerie Diane de Polignac, Paris, 2019

Selected Bibliography

Selected Bibliography

Marie Raymond, Abstraction, Lyrisme, Vérité…, in Kroniek Van Kunst En Kultuur, n°15, juin 1939

Charles Estienne, Léon Degand, Pour ou contre l’art abstrait, Paris, Le Courneur, 1947

Marie Raymond, Les Origines de l’Art abstrait, in Kroniek Van Kunst En Kultuur, n°9, September 1949

Marie Raymond, Soulages à la Galerie Lydia Conti, Vieira da Silva à la Galerie Pierre, in Kroniek Van Kunst En Kultuur, n°11, November 1949

Charles Estienne, L’art Abstrait est-il un Académisme?, Paris, Éditions de Beaune, 1950

Michel Ragon, Expression et Non-Figuration, Paris, Éditions de la Revue, 1950

Pierre Francastel, Peinture et Société, Lyon, Éditions Audin, 1951

Léon Degand, Julien Alvard, R. Van Gindertael, Témoignage pour l’Art Abstrait, Paris, Art d’Aujourd’hui, n° 1, 1952

Pierre Courthion, Peinture d’aujourd’hui, Geneva, Éditions Pierre Caillier, 1952

Marie Raymond, Interview avec Henri Matisse, in Mizue (monthly art magazine), Tokyo, n°571, March 1953

Robert Lebel, Pierre Descargues, R. Van Gindertael, Premier bilan de l’art actuel, Paris, Éditions Le Soleil Noir, 1953

Renée Huyghe, Dialogue avec le Visible, Paris, Éditions Flammarion, 1955

Michel Ragon, L’Aventure de l’Art Abstrait, Paris, Éditions Robert Laffont, 1956

Marcel Brion, L’Abstraction, Paris, Éditions Aimery Somogy, 1956

Jean Bouret, L’Art Abstrait: ses Origines, ses Luttes, sa Présence, Paris, Éditions Club Français du Livre, 1957

Michel Seuphor, Dictionnaire de la Peinture Abstraite, Paris, Éditions Fernand Hazan, 1957

Bernard Dorival, Les Peintres du XXe Siècle, Paris, Éditions Tisné, 1957

Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia, Aires Abstraites, Geneva, Éditions Pierre Caillier, 1957

Michel Ragon, La Peinture Actuelle, Paris, Éditions Berger- Levrault, 1959

Pierre Restany, Lyrisme et Abstraction, Milan, Éditions Apollinaire, 1960

Jean Cassou, Panorama des Arts Plastiques Contemporains, Paris, Éditions Gallimard, 1960

Michel Ragon, Naissance d’un Art Nouveau – Tendances et Techniques de l’Art, Paris, Éditions Albin Michel, 1963

Raymond Bayer, Entretiens sur l’Art Abstrait, Geneva, Éditions Pierre Caillier, 1964

Michel Seuphor, La Peinture Abstraite, sa Genèse, son Expansion, Paris, Éditions Flammarion, 1964

Herbert Read, Histoire de la Peinture Moderne, Paris, Éditions Somogy, 1966

Dora Vallier, L’Art Abstrait, Paris, Éditions Le Livre de Poche, 1967

Michel Ragon, Michel Seuphor, L’Art Abstrait 1939- 1970, Paris, Éditions Galerie Maeght, vol. III, 1973

Marie Raymond, Au Grand-Palais, la FIAC 79 – Les Fantasmes de Picasso, in + – O, n°29, April 1980

Michel Ragon, 25 Ans d’Art Vivant 1944-1969, Paris, Éditions Galilée, 1986

Marie Raymond Forty Years of Abstract Painting, San Francisco, Pascal de Sarthe Gallery, 1988

Geneviève Bonnefoi, Les Années Fertiles 1940-1960, Paris, Mouvements Éditions, 1988

Jean-Luc Daval, Histoire de la Peinture Abstraite, Paris, Éditions Fernand Hazan, 1988

Georges Boudaille, Patrick Javault, L’Art Abstrait, Paris, Nouvelles Éditions françaises, 1990

Marie Raymond Rétrospective 1937-1987, Nice, MAMAC, 1993

Lydia Harambourg, L’École de Paris 1945-1965 Dictionnaire des Peintres, Neuchâtel, Éditions Ides et Calendes, 1993

Marie Raymond / Yves Klein, Kerber Verlag, Bielefeld / Ludwig Museum, Koblenz,2006

Marie Raymond – Yves Klein Herencias, Madrid, Circulo de Bellas Arte, 2009

Marie Raymond – Vers la Lumière, Paris, Galerie Diane de Polignac, 2019

Marie Raymond Faq

On the MARIE RAYMOND FAQ page, find all the questions and answers dedicated to the modern art painter Marie Raymond.