Was born as Sarah Stern into the family of a plant manager; spent the first five years of her life in a small Poltava town. Her mother Khana, nee Terk (this name was later taken by Sonia), was originally from Odessa.
November 14, 1885, Hradyzk, Poltava province of the Russian Empire, now Ukraine - December 5, 1979, Paris, France
Sonia Terk-Delaunay (Sarah Ilinitchna Stern), a French avant-garde artist, illustrator, sculptor and designer of Jewish origin was born in Ukraine. The master worked in the styles of cubism, orphism and abstractionism. There are a few facts that eloquently testify to the great significance of her contribution to the development of avant-garde art: she became the first artist whose lifetime exhibition was organized in 1964 in the Louvre, and ten years later she was awarded the Order of the Legion of Honor. She was among the organizers of the international association “Abstraction-Creation”.
The work of Sonia who opened the interior and fashion boutique Casa Sonia in Paris expanded beyond painting and included many other arts. She became the greatest art deco master in the design of fabrics, wall coverings, clothes and accessories, and even her finds were widely used in advertising. The textile brand “Tissus Delaunay” and diverse works that included the concepts of geometric abstraction were successful at the International Exhibitions of Decorative Arts. In 1927, the artist gave lectures on the impact of painting on fashion at the Sorbonne.
Delaunay freely and easily moved from one technique to another, applied her vision in any field of activity – her goal was to bring art into everyday life. Cars fell into the field of her “decorative look”, she sold her ceramics, jewelry, clothes and furniture to a clientele, which included the art elite of Europe.
The master created illustrations for avant-garde literary works. The most famous are her graphic paintings of 1913 to a cubist poem by Cendrars, “Prose on the Trans-Siberian Express and Little French Jeanne”, a two-meter pleated book. The descriptive geometry of the drawings influenced the style of Paul Klee. In the same style, the artist completed the cover of the Vogue magazine in 1926. She worked with Rimbaud, Apollinaire, Mallarmé, Soupault, Breton, Louis Aragon and other writers.
As a stage designer, Sonia Delaunay collaborated with Serge Diaghilev, carried out the entire set for the design of the play by Dada poet Tristan Tzara, and also created furniture and costumes for films of several directors.
Key ideas:
– Sonia Terk interrupted her short studies at the Karlsruhe Academy of Art (Germany) after reading the treatise “Manet and his circle” by J. Meier-Graefe. However, the Paris Academy of La Pallet with its academic lessons of Amedee Ozenfant and D. de Segonzac did not satisfy her – she preferred visiting galleries and museums to studying the basics of painting and drawing.
– Sonia’s first paintings belong to the Paris period – portraits, still lifes and landscapes painted in oil owe much to Gauguin, Van Gogh and the Fauvists. Bright colours seem to jump out of pictures. Her passion for colours determined her long career.
– A breakthrough that moved her from figurative work to abstract was a small quilt sewn for her newborn son Charles in 1911. Sonia combined Ukrainian folk craft with the Paris avant-garde and anticipated experiments with colour and form, which became her technique.
– Under the influence of Cubists, Sonia moved away from figurativeness to artistic geometry and abstraction, experimenting with rhythm and colour decomposition. She became a colleague and an active follower of Robert Delaunay in the development of the style of orphism – a special variant of cubism based on the dynamics of colours, visual revolutions and displacements of circular shapes. The term was coined by Delaunay’s friend, influential art critic G. Apollinaire. Referring to the singer of ancient Greek mythology Orpheus, he emphasized that such use of colour brings light, movement and musical qualities to the work.
– Delaunay used the principle of simultanism not only in painting, but also in numerous design developments. This name conveys the phenomenon of “simultaneous contrast”, when the colours of the palette look different depending on the neighborhood with others. For example, gray on a dark background looks lighter than on a light background. Sonia sought to create a rounded-smooth rhythm, depth and movement through overlapping sections of bright shades almost without recognizable objects.
– In the 1930s, the artist was close to the abstractionist searches of Kandinsky, Mondrian and Hepworth. The couple organized the Paris Art Salon Realite Nouvel. In the postwar years, the organizing and creative activities of the artist were associated with a new heyday of Abstractionism.
– Delaunay formulated her key idea and the meaning of all her work as follows, “Praying to beauty has immense selflessness and a purely aesthetic element that ennobles life and turns it into love.”
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1975
Was born as Sarah Stern into the family of a plant manager; spent the first five years of her life in a small Poltava town. Her mother Khana, nee Terk (this name was later taken by Sonia), was originally from Odessa.
Lived and grew up in the family of her uncle – successful lawyer Heinrich Track in St. Petersburg. Visited the largest European museums. Terks provided her with a privileged general and cultural upbringing. However, her childhood memories of Ukraine remained forever: becoming an artist, she often remembered the “pure” colours and bright Ukrainian costumes.
Entered the German Academy of Art Karlsruhe – the largest institution in the state of Baden-Württemberg. Soon, after reading the study “Manet and his circle” by Julius Meier-Graefe, she decided to get an education in Paris; for some time, she studied at the La Pallet Academy from 1905.
First exhibited her works in the style of naturalism and post-impressionism at the Paris gallery Notre-Dame de Champ. She married a German collector, art critic, famous gallery owner Wilhelm Uhde – the marriage was fictitious and allowed Sonia to live legally in Paris, and helped Uhde to hide his homosexuality.
Married French artist Robert Delaunay – the couple had already been expecting a baby. Soon she and her husband began to develop the theory of simultaneity (simultism), as a result of which a special branch of Cubism was created, which G. Apollinaire called “Orphism”. Sonia later extended this style to fashionable clothes.
Her solo exhibition at the gallery “Storm” in Berlin. She completed a two-meter book with the text of Blaise Cendrars. During the war, the couple lived in Spain and Portugal, where they became friends with cultural figure Sergei Diaghilev.
She accepted Diaghilev’s proposal to create costumes for “Cleopatra” by Arensky; designed bold modern outfits for “Aida”. The revolution in her homeland led to the fact that Delaunays generously funded by their relatives were left without money.
Upon returning to Paris, she opened a fashion atelier together with couturier J. Heim and became the largest master of art deco. She created costumes for dada events, including the absurd plays of T. Tzara “Air Heart” (1921) and “Evening of the Prickly Heart”. She was a member of the Ukrainian-Russian Paris group “Via”, organized by I. Zdanevich. The Galerie der Sturm in Berlin hosted the works of Sonia and Robert from their Portuguese period.
Participated in the International Exhibition of Decorative Arts together with A. Exter, N. Altman and others. A year later, she worked on the scenery and costumes for the film “Little Parisian” by R. Le Sompierre and a film by M. Le Herbier. Decorated the car Citroen. Two years later, she gave a lecture at the Sorbonne on the influence of painting on fashion, proposing her idea of prêt-à-porter fashion.
Together with Robert Delaunay participated in the design of the Paris World Exhibition – a large panel measuring 225 square meters was awarded the Gold Medal. A joint exhibition of the Delaunay spouses took place in Amsterdam (1938). They organized the New Reality art salon in Paris. After the death of her husband in 1941, she lived in Graas.
In memory of her husband, she organized the exhibition “The First Masters of Abstract Art” in Paris; it was a success. In the postwar years, the organizing and creative activities of the artist were associated with a new flowering of Abstractionism. In 1958, a large retrospective exhibition of the painter was held at the Bielefeld Art Museum (Germany).
Became the first woman to hold her exhibition at the Louvre. Sonia and her son Charles presented 114 works of Sonia and Robert Delaunay to the National Museum of Modern Art of France, where the vernissage was also held. In 1969, she received the Grand Prix at Cannes.
For the 90th anniversary of the artist, her retrospective exhibition was organized at the Pompidou Center in Paris. She became the Knight of the Legion of Honor. At house number 16 on Simon Street in Paris, where Delaunays lived, a memorial plaque was placed.
flow
Post-impressionism
Fauvism
Cubism
Orphism
Abstractionism
friends
Robert Delaunay
Wassily Kandinsky
Marc Chagall
Alexandra Exter
Nathan Altman
artists
Van Gogh
Paul Gauguin
Henri Matisse
Andre Derain
Piet Mondrian
flow
Futurism
friends
Alexandra Exter
Nathan Altman
artists
Paul Klee
Samuel Halpert
Georgy Yakulov
Vladimir Baranov-Rossine
Aristarkh Lentulov
description
A few decades after her first experiments in colour rhythmic painting, a new development of the geometric form appeared in the works of Delaunay. Rectangles reduce the fluidity of rounded shapes, and this significant change indicates that the author continued to explore the topic throughout her career.
1968
description
From the 1930s, Delaunay began to study the motives of “rhythms”, created compositions with the placement of a number of colours, complementing or contradicting each other. This work is of particular importance - it was created for the 15th annual exhibition of the Tuileries Salon in Paris.
1938
description
The painting at the Aviation Palace in Paris is part of a series that Delaunay and her team of artists made for the International Exhibition of Art and Technology. The order marked the return of the artist to painting, attracted considerable attention to her, and was financially profitable for her.
1937
description
Delaunay's career went far beyond the scope of visual art and included the design of interior design, clothing, fabrics and accessories. This canvas directly relates to her work as a designer of women's dresses - her textiles under the brand name Casa Sonia became popular and sold all over the world, without losing their relevance to this day.
1925
description
Terk-Delaunay's attention to how complementary colours react to each other was not limited to painting. The artist boldly applied this powerful technique to areas where such methods were not previously known - in the design of clothes and accessories, in the world of home decor items.
1913
description
The flow of colour and rhythm depicts several pairs (or one rotating in dance) under multi-coloured electric lights - the latest Parisian sensation. The painting was panoramic and the largest of the four versions - 3.9 m long and was the first work where the artist used contrasting colours such as blue and orange, located next to each other for maximum intensity.
1913