środa, 18 kwietnia 2012

BIOGRAFIA

1930
Catherine Marie-Agnès Fal de Saint Phalle was born at Neuilly-sur-Seine on October 29. She is the second of five children born to Jeanne Jacqueline née Harper and André Marie Fal de Saint Phalle. Her father is one of seven brothers with a share in the family’s banking house. When the stock exchange collapsed in 1930, he lost both the business and his fortune. Marie-Agnès is sent to her paternal grandparents in France where she spends the next three years in Nièvre.
1933
Marie-Agnès rejoins her parents in Greenwich, Connecticut. She often spends her summer holidays at the Château of Filerval, owned by her maternal grandfather and built by Le Nôtre.
1937
The family moves into an apartment on East 88th Street, New York. Marie-Agnès, now known as Niki, attends the Convent School of the Sacred Heart in East 91st Street.
1941
Niki de Saint Phalle is expelled from the Convent School. She moves to Princeton, New Jersey, to live with her grandparents, who left France because of the Second World War. She attends the local public school.
1942
Niki de Saint Phalle returns to her parents’ home and attends Brearley School, New York. She reads Edgar Allan Poe, Shakespeare and Greek tragedy. She takes part in school performances and writes her first plays and poems, among which is La Peste.
1944
Niki de Saint Phalle paints the fig leaves on the school statues bright red. Her headmistress suggests, Niki should either have psychiatric treatment or leave school. Her parents send her to a Convent School at Suffren, New York State.
1947
Niki de Saint Phalle graduates from Oldfield School, Maryland.
1948-1949
She works as a model. Photographs of her appear in Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar and on the cover of Life Magazine. Niki de Saint Phalle, 18, elopes with Harry Mathews, 19, who had enrolled in the US marine. On June 6, 1949, they get married in a registry office.
1950
In February, fulfilling their parent's wish, Niki de Saint Phalle and Harry Mathews get married in the French Church, New York, and settle in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He studies music at Harvard University and Niki begins to produce her first oils and gouaches.
1951
In April, birth of their daughter, Laura, in Boston.
1952
Niki, Harry and Laura Mathews leave Boston and move into an apartment in the Rue Jean Dolent in Paris. Harry Mathews carries on with his music studies in the hope of becoming a conductor. Niki studies drama. They both take charge of their daughter’s education. The family spends the summer months in the South of France, Spain and Italy, where they visit museums and cathedrals. Niki is impressed by the idea that a cathedral is the result of a "collective ideal"; this thought will later have an important impact on her own work.
1953
Niki de Saint Phalle suffers a severe nervous breakdown and is treated as an in-patient in Nice. Since painting helps her to overcome this crisis in her life, she decides to give up acting and become an artist. At the same time, Harry Mathews abandons his music studies and writes his first novel.
1954
In March, Niki and Harry Mathews buy their first car in Nice. They drive back to Paris, where they share a house with Anthony Bonner, an American jazz musician and composer. Niki Mathews is introduced to the American painter Hugh Weiss, who remains her mentor for five years and who encourages her to retain her autodidactic style. In September, Niki, Harry and Laura Mathews move to Deyá on the island of Mallorca.
1955
Birth of their son Philip on May the 1st. Niki visits Madrid and Barcelona, where she discovers the work of Gaudí. These visits and particularly the Park Güell, change her life, and give her the idea of creating a garden of sculpture herself one day.
1956-1958
The Mathews family spends most of their time in the French Alps at Lans-en-Vercors. Niki produces a series of oil paintings, which she exhibits for the first time in St. Gallen in April 1956.
In August the Mathews family returns to Paris and move into a small apartment in the rue Alfred Durand-Claye. Harry and Niki often visit the Louvre and other museums. Niki discovers the works of Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso and the Douanier Rousseau. With Harry Mathews she meets many contemporary writers including John Ashbery and Kenneth Koch.
In 1956, Niki also meets Jean Tinguely and his wife Eva Aeppli. Niki visits Joseph Ferdinand Cheval’s Palais Idéal at Hauterives. For her first sculpture, Niki asks Jean Tinguely to prepare an iron structure, which she covers with plaster.
1959
Niki de Saint Phalle visits the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and sees works by the American artists Jasper Johns, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Robert Rauschenberg.
1960
Niki and Harry Mathews separate; Harry moves to the Rue de Varennes with their children, while Niki remains in the Rue Alfred Durand-Claye. She continues her artistic experiments; producing assemblages in plaster and target pictures. At the end of the year, she and Jean Tinguely move into the Impasse Ronsin, where they share the same studio. Jean Tinguely introduces her to Pontus Hulten, the director of the Moderna Museet in Stockholm who will organize many important exhibitions at that time and buy some of her works for the Moderna Museet.
1961
During February a group exhibition is held at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris under the title Comparaison: Peinture - Sculpture. Niki de Saint Phalle exhibits a target montage titled Portrait of My Lover.
On February 12 she organizes the first of more than twelve “shootings” which are held in 1961, 1962 and 1963. These events involve assemblages incorporating containers of paint which, concealed beneath the plaster, spatter their contents over the image when shot with a pistol. The resultant pictures are known as “shooting paintings”. Among spectators at the first event are members of the Nouveaux Réalistes. Enthused, Pierre Restany invites Niki to join the group, which already includes Arman, César, Christo, Gérard Deschamps, François Dufrêne, Raymond Hains, Yves Klein, Martial Raysse, Mimmo Rotella, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely and Jacques Villeglé.
In March, Niki de Saint Phalle takes part in an exhibition, Bewogen Beweging, organized by Pontus Hulten at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. This exhibition is later shown in the Moderna Museet in Stockholm and the Louisiana Museum in Humlebaek, Denmark.
On June 20, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely take part in one of John Cage's concerts, Variations II, in the American Embassy in Paris. While David Tudor plays music by John Cage on the piano, other works of art are created on stage.
Pierre Restany organizes at the Galerie J, run by his wife Jeannine Goldschmidt, Niki's first one-woman exhibition under the title Tir à volonté, from June 30 to July 12. Leo Castelli, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and all the Nouveaux Réalistes attend the launch. Rauschenberg buys a “shooting painting”.
Pierre Restany organizes a Festival of Nouveaux Réalistes at the Galerie Muratore in Nice. For the official opening on the evening of July 13, Niki de Saint Phalle arranges a “shooting” at the Abbaye Roseland at which all the Nouveaux Réalistes take part.
Marcel Duchamp introduces Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely to Salvador Dalí. During a trip to Spain in August, both artists are invited to take part in celebrations in honor of Dalí. They create a life-size bull made of plaster and paper, which explodes in the Arena at Figueras during a firework display.
In October Niki de Saint Phalle takes part in The Art of Assemblage exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art in New York. The exhibition subsequently travels to the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Art and the San Francisco Museum of Art.
Between June and September more than fifty international magazines and journals carry reports on Niki de Saint Phalle’s work.
In the fall, Larry Rivers and his wife Clarice settle in one of the studios in the Impasse Ronsin; they soon strike up a friendship.
1962
In February Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely travel to California and visit Simon Rodilla’s Watts Tower near Los Angeles. With the help of Niki de Saint Phalle he organizes a “happening”, Study for an End of the World Number 2, in the Nevada Desert. Niki de Saint Phalle stages her first two “shootings” in the United States: the first is held on March 4 at Virginia Dwan’s beach house at Malibu, the second assisted by Ed Kienholz In the hills overlooking Malibu.
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely travel to Mexico.
On May 4, Niki de Saint Phalle, Jean Tinguely and many other artists take part in Kenneth Koch’s play, The Construction of Boston, directed by Merce Cunningham. On stage at the Maidman Playhouse, New York is her “shooting sculpture”, Vénus de Milo.
Following her return to Europe she exhibits ten works at a one-woman exhibition at Paris’s Galerie Rive Droite. Among the visitors is Alexander Iolas, who invites Niki de Saint Phalle to exhibit in New York the following October. He supports her financially for many years and organizes numerous exhibitions. It is Iolas who introduces her to the Surrealist painters, Victor Brauner, Max Ernst and René Magritte.
Yves Klein dies suddenly on June 6.
From August 30 to September 30, Niki takes part in Dylaby (Dynamic Labyrinth), a large-scale installation at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, in which Robert Rauschenberg, Martial Raysse, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely and Per Olof Ultvedt are also involved.
From October 15 to November 3, Niki de Saint Phalle opens her first one-woman exhibition in New York at the Alexander Iolas Gallery. In addition to ten other works, she exhibits her Homage to Le Facteur Cheval, a shooting gallery in which members of the public are invited to fire at a construction.
1963
In May, Virginia Dwan organizes a shooting event in Los Angeles at which Niki de Saint Phalle shoots at her monumental sculpture King Kong . This work is bought by the Moderna Museet in Stockholm. Her taste for horror films is a source of inspiration for her.
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely buy a former Inn, the "Auberge du Cheval Blanc", at Soisy-sur-Ecole near Essonne. Niki de Saint Phalle confronts the various roles of women in society, producing a series of sculptures of women in childbirth, devouring mothers, witches and whores.
1964
Niki de Saint Phalle spends the summer at Lutry, near Lausanne working on large paper mâché and wool heads, brides and her St George and the Dragon.
In September she has her first solo exhibition at London’s Hanover Gallery.
In October she visits New York where she lives and works at the Chelsea Hotel, making a series of paper collages of Nanas, hearts and dragons.
1965
Inspired by Clarice Rivers' pregnancy, Niki de Saint Phalle creates in April, her first Nanas made of paper maché and wool.
In August, Monique Jacot writes a 12 page article on Niki In the Swiss art review DU.
In September, Niki shows her Nanas during her solo exhibition at the Galerie Alexandre Iolas, in Paris. During the show the Artists Club of New York organizes a sort of tombola where works by leading artists are left in lockers at Penn Station. Keys cost $10 each. On that occasion, Iolas publishes her first artist's book, which includes a handwritten text illustrated with her drawings of Nanas.
At Iolas' suggestion, she begins to work on many promotional projects (invitations, posters, books, writings). Niki de Saint Phalle makes her first series of silkscreen prints.
1966
In collaboration with Martial Raysse and Jean Tinguely, Niki de Saint Phalle designs the scenery and costumes for Roland Petit’s ballet, Eloge de la folie, performed in March at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris.
In June, Niki de Saint Phalle, Jean Tinguely and Per Olof Ultvedt are invited by Pontus Hulten to install a sculpture in the Moderna Museet in Stockholm. They decide to create a monumental reclining Nana, 28 meters long, 9 meters wide and 6 meters high. It is called Hon (the Swedish pronoun, “she”).
While working in Stockholm, Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely meet the young Swiss artist, Rico Weber. He works on Hon with them and remains their assistant and colleague for many years.
In October, Niki de Saint Phalle designs the sets and costumes for Aristophanes’ Lysistrata in a production by Rainer von Diez at the Staatstheater in Kassel.
1967
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely work on Le Paradis Fantastique, a commission from the French government for the French Pavilion at Expo‘67 in Montreal. The commission consists of nine painted sculptures by Niki de Saint Phalle and six black kinetic machines by Jean Tinguely.
Le Paradis Fantastique is subsequently shown at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo and, for a year, in Central Park, New York. It is now on permanent exhibition in Stockholm, close to the Moderna Museet.
In August, Niki de Saint Phalle’s first museum show is held at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, under the title Nana Power. For this exhibition she creates her first Nana Dream House and her first Nana Fountain and plans her first Nana Town.
The new exhibits are made of polyester, a material with which she has only recently started to work.
1968
In June, Niki de Saint Phalle’s first play, ICH (All about Me), is performed at the Staatstheater in Kassel. Her co-author is the director, Rainer von Diez. She designs the sets, costumes and the bill.
In October, Niki de Saint Phalle exhibits her eighteen-part wall relief, Last Night I Had a Dream, at the Galerie Alexandre Iolas in Paris.
Niki de Saint Phalle designs inflatable Nanas, which are marketed in New York.
Towards the end of the year Niki de Saint Phalle suffers serious breathing difficulties, caused by inhaling polyester fumes and dust. She visits Morocco.
1969
Following her return from a visit to India, Niki de Saint Phalle begins work on her first architectural project, three houses in the South of France for Rainer von Diez, completed in 1971
The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York acquires the sculpture, Black Venus, and exhibits it at its April exhibition, Contemporary American Sculpture, Selection 2.
Niki de Saint Phalle begins work on La tête (Le Cyclop), a collaborative project in Milly-la-Forêt initiated by Jean Tinguely and involving a large number of artists.
1970
On November 29, a festival is organized by Pierre Restany and Guido Le Noci in Milan to mark the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Nouveaux Réalistes. At the opening ceremony, Niki de Saint Phalle shoots at an altar assemblage.
A series of seventeen serigraphs is published in Paris under the title Nana Power.
Niki de Saint Phalle visits Egypt for the first time with Jean Tinguely.
1971
On July 13, Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely are married in Soisy. They visit Morocco. Her granddaughter Bloum is born on the Island of Bali: the daughter of Laura and Laurent Condominas.
Niki de Saint Phalle designs her first jewelry.
At the end of the year she begins work on Golem, an architectural project for children in Jerusalem’s Rabinovitch Park, completed in 1972.
1972
From now on Niki de Saint Phalle works with Robert Haligon, Fabricant de Plastiques d’Art and later with his son Gérard, to produce her large-scale sculptures and editions.
In July she rents the Château-de-Mons near Grasse in the South of France, where she begins shooting the first version of Daddy, written and produced in association with Peter Whitehead, and shown at London’s Hammer Cinema the following November. Niki de Saint Phalle visits Greece.
1973
In January, Niki de Saint Phalle works on a revised version of Daddy in Soisy and New York, again with Mia Martin, Clarice Rivers and Rainer von Diez. The world première of the revised version is shown in April as part of the 11th New York Film Festival at the Lincoln Center. Niki de Saint Phalle designs the cover of the program.
Niki de Saint Phalle designs a swimming pool for Georges Plouvier in Saint-Tropez.
In the Belgian town of Knokke-le-Zoute she builds the Dragon, a fully equipped playhouse for the children of Fabienne and Roger Nellens.
1974
Niki de Saint Phalle installs three gigantic Nanas in Hanover, which the city names Caroline, Charlotte and Sophie, in honor of in honor of Hannover’s most recognized queens.
Galerie Alexandre Iolas in Paris shows an exhibition of her architectural projects.
She suffers an abscess on her lung, caused by years of working with polyester. After a period in hospital she visits Arizona and St. Moritz to convalesce. It is here that she meets again Marella Agnelli, a friend whom she met in the 50s, in New York. Niki tells her of her dream of making a sculpture garden and Marella’s brothers, Carlo and Nicolas Carracciolo offer her land in Tuscany on which to realize her dream.
1975
Niki de Saint Phalle writes the screenplay for the film, Un rêve plus long que la nuit. Many of her artist friends are involved in shooting the film. She designs several pieces of furniture for the sets.
1976
Niki de Saint Phalle spends the entire year in Swiss mountains, planning her sculpture park.
1977
Together with Constantin Mulgrave, Niki de Saint Phalle designs the sets for the film, The Traveling Companion, which is based on a fairy story by Hans Christian Andersen, yet the film is never finalized. She visits Mexico and New Mexico. Ricardo Menon becomes her assistant, continuing to work with her for the next ten years.
1978
Niki de Saint Phalle begins laying out her Giardino dei Tarocchi on the estate of Carlo and Nicola Carracciolo at Garavicchio in Tuscany. Inspired by the Tarot cards, Niki begins a series of 22 monumental sculptures.
1979
Niki de Saint Phalle spends most of her time in Tuscany laying the foundations for her Tarot Garden.  In March she holds her first exhibition in Japan at Tokyo’s Watari Gallery. Gimpel & Weitzenhoffer of New York holds an exhibition of the models and photographs for her architectural projects. The exhibition, Monumental Projects, tours the U.S.A.
She invents new sculptures, which she calls Skinnies.
1980
In April, Niki de Saint Phalle begins work on the first sculptures for her Tarot Garden, The Magician and The High Priestess. In Ulm, her sculpture Le Poète et sa Muse, is unveiled on the university campus. The installation coincides with an exhibition of her graphic work, which lasts from May until July.
From July to September the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris devotes an important retrospective exhibition to her, that subsequently travels to Austria, Germany and Sweden.
Yoko Masuda organizes the first exhibition at Space Niki in Tokyo.
Niki makes her first polyester snake chairs, vases and lamps.
1981
Niki de Saint Phalle rents a small house close to the Tarot Garden for which she employs local workers. Jean Tinguely and his All Star Swiss Team of Sepp Imhof and Rico Weber take on the task of welding the tarot sculptures.
In spring she paints the exterior of a new twin-engine airplane, the Piper aérostar 602 P, for the Peter Stuyvesant Foundation in Amsterdam. In June, the plane arrives second in the first Paris-New York-Paris transatlantic air race.
1982
An American company, Jacqueline Cochran, New York, invites Niki de Saint Phalle to create a new perfume. She uses the proceeds to finance her Tarot Garden.
Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle collaborate on a sculpture-fountain of 15 elements for the Place Igor Stravinsky, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
They are assisted by Pierre Marie Lejeune who continues to assist Niki and Jean for many years.
The Galleries of Gimpel & Weitzenhoffer in New York and Gimpel Fils, London, show Niki’s Skinnies.
Work on the Tarot Garden progresses. Substituting Jean Tinguely, the Dutch artist Doc van Winsen works on the steel construction of the sculptures. By the end of the year they begin applying cement.
Niki suffers her first attack of rheumatoid arthritis.
1983
The Stuart Foundation commissions a sculpture, Sun God, for the campus of the University of California at San Diego.
Niki de Saint Phalle moves into The Empress in the Tarot Garden and will use that building, designed in the shape of a sphinx, as a studio and home for the next seven years.
She decides to use ceramics in addition to mirrors and glass for the sculptures. Ricardo Menon discovers Venera Finocchiaro, a ceramics teacher in Rome, who produces all their ceramics from now on.
1984
Niki de Saint Phalle works full-time on her Tarot Garden.
1985
The buildings The Magician, The Tower, The Empress and The High Priestess are completed. Jean Tinguely constructs a machine for The Tower of Babel.
1986
Niki de Saint Phalle spends most of the year at Garavicchio, where more sculptures are installed in her Tarot Garden.
Together with Professor Silvio Barandun she writes and illustrates a book, AIDS: You Can’t Catch It Holding Hands, published in English and later translated into five different languages. Ricardo Menon returns to Paris to attend drama school. He introduces Niki de Saint Phalle to Marcelo Zitelli, who becomes her assistant.
1987
In March, the Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung in Munich holds a major exhibition of Niki de Saint Phalle’s work, Niki de Saint Phalle - Bilder - Figuren - Phantastische Gärten.
Her first retrospective in America is held at the Nassau County Museum of Fine Art in Roslyn, Long Island, under the title Fantastic Visions: Works by Niki de Saint Phalle.
1988
Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely receive a commission from President Mitterrand to design a fountain for Château-Chinon, where he had been mayor for many years. Mitterrand unveils the fountain, in front of the town hall, on March 10.
Helen Schneider commissions another fountain for the Schneider Children’s Hospital on Long Island. Niki de Saint Phalle designs a snake tree 5.50 meters in height.
She also designs a gigantic kite L'Oiseau amoureux, for a world-wide traveling exhibition devoted to kites and organized by the Goethe Institute, Japan.
1989
Niki de Saint Phalle has a twin exhibition at the JGM Galerie and the Galerie de France under the title Oeuvres des années 80, where she shows works created in collaboration with Jean Tinguely.
She works in bronze for the first time and designs a series of Egyptian gods.
Ricardo Menon dies of AIDS.
Together with her son Philip Mathews, she produces a cartoon film that is based on her book, AIDS: You Can’t Catch It Holding Hands.
1990
In June, Niki de Saint Phalle exhibits works from the 1960s at both the Galerie de France and the JGM Galerie in Paris. The exhibitions are titled Tirs… et autres révoltes 1961-1964.
In November she presents her film about Aids at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. To coincide with the presentation, the museum mounts an exhibition of drawings for the film and for the revised version of the book Sida: tu ne l’attraperas pas is published by the Agence Française .de Lutte contre le SIDA and distributed to schoolchildren throughout France.
1991
Niki makes a maquette for Le Temple Idéal, a place for worship for all religions. This architecture was originally conceived in the early 1970s as a hopeful alternative to the religious intolerance she observed while working in Jerusalem. Receives commission from the city of Nîmes, France, to build this architectural sculpture. Because of politics, project is never realized.
In June, an exhibition is held at the Gimpel Fils Gallery, London, under the title Gods.
Jean Tinguely dies in Bern, Switzerland in August 1991. In his honor, she makes her first
kinetic sculptures, the Meta-Tinguelys.
1992-1993
Major Retrospective organized by the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle in Bonn, Germany, travels -slightly modified for every new exhibition- to the McLellan Galleries, Glasgow; the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; and the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Conceives a series of kinetic reliefs or paintings in movement, the Tableaux Eclatés. Installation of a large-scale outdoor fountain, Lebensretter, for the City of Duisburg, Germany.
Makes sculpture. The Footballers, for the Musée Olympique in Lausanne.
1994
Niki de Saint Phalle Moves to San Diego, California, where she lives for next eight years. Contracts with Lech Juretko to organize a studio for the cutting of mirrors, glass and stones, which she is increasingly using in her sculptures instead of paint.
Creates a series of silkscreens, California Diary, published by Ebi Kornfeld, as well as 26 lithographs created with two former collaborators of Sam Francis – George Page and Jacob Samuel. In October, the Niki Museum opens in Nasu, Japan, devoted to the life and work of Niki de Saint Phalle.
She begins collaboration with architect Mario Botta on a major sculpture/architectural project, Noah's Ark, for Jerusalem.
She designs postage stamp Stop AIDS/Stop SIDA for Switzerland.
Niki receives Le Prix Caran d’Ache.
1995
Peter Schamoni completes a documentary film about Niki, Who is the Monster? You or Me? The French cultural organization AFAA organizes traveling exhibition to museums in Central and South America. Embarks on collaboration with Swiss architect Mario Botta for a major sculpture/architecture project, Noah’s Ark, commissioned by the Jerusalem Foundation for The Tisch Family Zoological Gardens in Jerusalem, Israel.
The French cultural agency Asociacion Francesca de Accion Artistica, organizes a traveling exhibition to major museums in Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil and Chile.
1996
Begins construction of the Gila Monster, a children’s playhouse in the form of a dragon 12 feet high, 30 feet long covered in mosaic of mirrors, stones, ceramics and glass at a private residence in San Diego.
The Jean Tinguely Museum designed by Mario Botta opens in Basel. Niki donates 55 major sculptures and over a hundred graphic works by Jean making the bulk of the collection.
1997
For the main railway station in Zürich, Niki receives a commission from the Swiss Railways (CFF) for L’Ange Protecteur, a 33 feet high sculpture, unveiled in November.
Mario Botta constructs a wall and entrance for the Tarot Garden.
Niki de Saint Phalle designs snake chairs in wood with mosaic inlay, made by Del Cover and Dave Carr.
1998
Official opening of the Tarot Garden on May 15, 1998.
Finishes the last of twenty-two animal sculptures for Noah’s Ark as well as the Black Heroes series, an homage to prominent African-Americans including Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong and Josephine Baker.
Largest American retrospective to date curated by close friend Martha Longenecker, director of The Mingei International Museum in San Diego.
1999-2000
Begins search for land on which to build a sculpture garden in San Diego County. In October 2000, the City of Escondido accepts offer to create a garden in the Sankey Arboretum in Kit Carson Park. Starts design work and plans for Queen Califia’s Magical Circle. She draws much of its imagery from her interpretations of early California history, myth, and legend, Native Americans and Meso-American culture and the study of indigenous plant and wildlife.
Awarded the 12th Praemium Imperial Prize (Sculpture Category) sponsored by the Japan Art Association and considered to be the equivalent to the Nobel Prize in the art world. Among the other prize winners in 2000 are American composer Stephen Sondheim, painter Ellsworth Kelly, the German composer Hans Werner Henze, and the British architect Richard Rogers.
Niki starts to exhibit with the Tasende Gallery, San Diego.
In November 2000, the Sprengel Museum in Hannover unveils a portion of the more than 300 works donated by the artist and publishes a major catalogue about the gift.
Makes a new series of vases.
2001
Accepts commission to redesign and ornament three rooms in the historic 17th century Grotto built in Hannover’s Royal Herrenhausen Garden. Originally decorated with shells, crystals and minerals removed in the 18th century, the building was used as a store for many years. Donates major gifts of work to the City of Nice for its Musée d'Art Moderne et d'Art Contemporain and to the Musée d'Art Décoratifs in Paris.
Designs and builds a 12-meter-tall sculpture ‘Coming Together’ for the Port of San Diego. The sculpture in shape of half a female and male face united, adorned with mosaic and stones, is inaugurated in October.
Finishes writing the second volume of her autobiography Harry & Me. The Family Years.
2002
Niki de Saint Phalle dies on May 21 at the age of 71 in La Jolla, California.
Granddaughter Bloum Cardenas, assistant/collaborator Marcelo Zitelli, technical advisor Lech Juretko as well as other members of her international staff oversee final work on Escondido and Hannover projects to ensure they meet her specifications. The exhibition, From Niki Matthews to Niki De Saint Phalle, opens at The Sprengel Museum.
2003 
The Grotto opens in March with mosaic decorations of glass, mirrors, and pebbles as well as a host of painted and sculpted figures.
Summer exhibition of monumental sculptures in Palais-Royal Gardens in Paris
Queen Califia’s Magical Circle is dedicated and opens to the public on October 26. This is her first American garden and the last major project realized by the artist.
The Niki Charitable Art Foundation, a non-profit organization, is established.


czwartek, 8 marca 2012

Niki de Saint Phalle właściwie Catherine Marie-Agnes Fal de Saint Phalle (ur. 29 października 1930 w Neuilly-sur-Seine, zm. 21 maja 2002 w San Diego), francuska rzeźbiarka i malarka.

Jako nastolatka pracowała jako modelka, jej zdjęcia ukazały się m.in. w czasopismach Life i Vogue. W 1949 poślubiła amerykańskiego pisarza Harry'ego Mathewsa, małżeństwem byli do 1961, z tego związku urodziło się dwoje dzieci. W latach 50. zrezygnowała z kariery modelki i zaczęła malować. Wpływ na porzucenie dotychczasowego stylu życia miało przeżyte w tym okresie załamanie nerwowe - malarstwo było rodzajem terapii.
Po rozwodzie z Mathewsem związała się ze szwajcarskim rzeźbiarzem Jeanem Tinguelym. Na początku lat 60. zasłynęła jako autorka serii obrazów-tarcz strzelniczych. We wnętrzu białego obrazu de Saint Phalle ukrywała pojemniki z farbą, które po jego przestrzeleniu wypływały i malowały dzieło. W tej samej dekadzie stworzyła swoje pierwsze rzeźby.
Międzynarodową sławę przyniosły jej gigantyczne plenerowe rzeźby i instalacje realizowane wspólnie z Tinguelym. Jako materiału używała poliestru, jej rzeźby są bardzo kolorowe. W swoich pracach często wykorzystywała motyw kobiecego ciała.
Do najciekawszych realizacji artystki należy pokazana w 1966 w Moderna Museet w Sztokholmie olbrzymka - Nana:Hon. En Kathedral (Ona. Katedra) zrealizowana wspólnie z Tinguelym i Per Olofem Ultvedtem. W długim na 28, szerokim na 9 i wysokim na 6 metrów leżącym na plecach ciele Nany, do którego wchodziło się przez waginę, umieszczono m.in. kino, ławeczkę dla zakochanych, bar coca-colowy, akwarium czy planetarium oraz szereg instalacji i prac realizujących przedsięwzięcie artystów. Przez pępek zwiedzający wychodzili do Niebieskiej werandy - swoistego hołdu dla Yves'a Kleina.
Ana noire (maillot de bain vert), 1965r.

Shooting picture, 1961r.


Queen Of Hearts, 1960-1961r.