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Mariette Teisserenc, born in Grand-Couronne (Seine-Maritime, France), on March 3, 1940, is a French visual artist, painter and engraver.[1][2][3] She is also known as "Teisse" or "Teisse-Renc".
Mariette Teisserenc | |
---|---|
Born | Mariette Dessèvre 5 March 1940 Grand-Couronne (Seine-Maritime), France |
Occupation | Painter |
Spouse |
Jacques Teisserenc (m. 1963) |
Trained as a Graphic designer at Düsseldorf's School of Decorative Arts (1967–1972),[1][4] she gave up a career in the advertising industry in 1978 to dedicate herself to her artistic practice.
As an abstract painter and advocate for recognition of women artists in France and abroad,[5][6][7] she was the President of the French women artists' group "Art et Regard des Femmes ".[8][9]
Her work is characterized by clean shapes, strong lines and the invariable use of the colour black. It expresses tensions between forms and the search for equilibrium.[10]
In 1969, Teisserenc was awarded a Second Prize for Graphic-Design from the company Henkel & Cie GmbH (Düsseldorf, West-Germany). In 1971, she received first prize from the Nordwestdeutsche Austellungsgesellschaft mbH (NOWEA, Messe Düsseldorf). In 1983, she received a silver medal from the Bilan de l'Art Contemporain Foundation (Melun-Almont, France).[1]
In 1996, the Association française d’action artistique (part of the French Foreign Affairs Ministry) and the Ministry for Indigenous Affairs of Quebec awarded her a grant to travel to the Nunavik region and study the use of the ulu, a knife specific to Inuit women. She exhibited the results of her work in 1998 at Riverin-Arlogos Gallery, Eastman, Canada.[11]
Mariette Teisserenc was president of the french feminist artists collective Art et regard des femmes .[3]
In 2012, Teisserenc designed the stained glass windows of Saint-Peter and Saint-Paul Church in Brûlon-sur-Sarthe, France.[12]
Selected exhibitions
edit- 1970: "Rythmen und Kompositionen – Bilder von Mariette Teisserenc und Maïkki Strömberg", General Consulate of France, Düsseldorf, Germany[4]
- 1972: "Jahresausstellung Fachhochschule Düsseldorf", Schloss Benrath, Düsseldorf, Germany[4]
- 1972: "Mòstra Del Larzac" (5th ed.), Les Infruts – La Couvertoirade, France
- 1976: "Mòstra Del Larzac" (9th ed.: "Le Beaubourg d'Occitanie"), Les Infruts – La Couvertoirade, France[13]
- 1978: "Berufsverband Bildender Künstler*innen Berlin" (BBK), Villa Engelhardt, Düsseldorf, Germany[1]
- 1979: "Art et regard des femmes (peintures et sculptures)", Mairie of the 3rd arrondissement of Paris, France[4]
- 1979: "Salon de l'Union des Femmes Peintres et Sculpteurs " (95th ed.), Musée du Luxembourg, Paris, France[4]
- 1981: "Jahresausstellung Düsseldorfer Künstler-Vereinigung", Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, Germany
- 1982: "International Festival of Woman Artists", Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany
- 1982: "Salon de la Jeune Peinture" (33rd edition), Grand Palais des Champs-Élysées, Paris, France[14]
- 1983: "Art expo NY" (Fondation Bilan de l’Art contemporain), Coliseum, Columbus Circle, New York City, United States[1]
- 1985: "Expositie: Mariette Teisserenc, Leny Aardse-Scholten, Sheila Reid", Centraal Beheer Kunstgalerij, Apeldoorn, Netherlands
- 1985: "Schilderijen en objecten in gemengde techniek", Stichting Kasteel van Rhoon, Albrandswaard, Netherlands
- 1985: "Paris-couleur-Montréal" (Jeune Peinture), Maison de la culture de Côte-des-Neiges, Montreal, Canada
- 1986: "Tour of America – An Exhibition of Contemporary Art: Sheila Reid, Leny Aardse, Mariette Teisserenc", The Fine Arts Gallery, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi, United States
- 1986: "Tour of America", Maier Museum of Art, Lynchburg, Virginia, United States
- 1986: "Tour of America", Nexus/Foundation for Today's Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States[5]
- 1990: "Kontraste – Mariette Teisserenc (Malerin) und Peter Rübsam (Bildhauer)", Fenster Galerie, Düsseldorf, Germany[5]
- 1993: "International Women Artists Exhibition" (Alliance of Woman Artists), Grand Palais, Paris, France[5]
- 1998: "Retour du Grand Nord, a French artists visiting the Inuit", Riverin-Arlogos Gallery, Eastman, Canada[11]
- 1999: "Ariane-Essor", Petronas Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- 2003: "Plages: Le numéro 100 de la revue" (art magazine), Weiller Gallery, Paris, France
- 2004: "Silviane Léger et Mariette Teisserenc", S. Léger's art studio Tourcoing, Lille, France
- 2015: "Les 30 ans de la Galerie Riverin-Arlogos: Mariette Teisse-Renc, Jean-Michel Correa, Daniel Lacomme", Riverin-Arlogos Gallery, Eastman, Canada[15][16][17]
- 2021: "Semaine d’Art Contemporain de Saint-Mandé" (37th ed.), Saint-Mandé, Val-de-Marne, France
Bibliography
edit- 2001, Lettres d’Afrique du Sud : un livre sur la Paix [South African's Letters: a Book about Peace], Catherine Samet (text) and Mariette Teisserenc (text), Paris V : L’Harmattan, 250 pp. ISBN 2-7475-1442-0.
- 2006, Les Mille et un contes et récits de Tozeur ou L’aventure du Sud Tunisien [The Thousand and One Tales of Tozeur or the South Tunisian Adventure], Catherine Samet (text) and Mariette Teisserenc (text and illustrations), foreword by Moncer Rouissi, Paris V : L’Harmattan, 272 pp. ISBN 2-296-01054-7.
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e Klaus-Dieter Lehmann (November 1983). Bildende Künstler und Autoren Düsseldorf (in German). Düsseldorf: Literaturdüro Nordrhein-Westfalen e.V. p. n.p. (1p.).
- ^ "Teisse-Renc, Mariette". De Gruyter : Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon (AKL). 2021. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
- ^ a b ArtFacts. "Mariette Teisserenc | Artist". ArtFacts. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
- ^ a b c d e Hans Joachim Orth (1980). 1980 Düsseldorf Creativ (in German). Düsseldorf: Verlag Müller «Schwann» GmbH. p. 274. ISBN 978-3-88528-300-3.
- ^ a b c d Owens, Georgette L. (1997). International Women Artists – Entering The Second Millenium. Greenbrae (CA): Alliance of Women Artists. pp. 148–9. ISBN 0-9658412-0-0.
- ^ Dumont, Fabienne (2014). Des sorcières comme les autres : Artistes et féministes dans la France des années 1970 - Collection Archives du féminisme (in French). Presses universitaires de Rennes. ISBN 978-2-7535-3250-2.
- ^ Balaram, Rakhee (2022-03-08). Women's groups and collective art practices in France in the 1970's. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-2517-0. Retrieved 2023-02-23.
- ^ Quinby, Diana (2004-12-01). "De l'Art et du Féminisme en France dans les années 1970". Archives du Féminisme. n°8 (1): n.d.
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has extra text (help) - ^ Dumont, Fabienne (2019). "À l'assaut ! Explosion d'assaut ! Explosion d'expositions de femmes artistes en France pendant le mouvement féministe". Artl@s Bulletin (Purdue Univ.). 8 (1): n.d.
- ^ n.a. (1983). Three Contemporary Artists: Sheila Reid, Mariette Teisserenc, Leny Aardse-Scholten. Albany, New York: Mario Negri Institute Foundation. p. 120.
- ^ a b n.a. (1998-06-06). "Expositions : Eastman Riverin-Arlogos". La tribune. pp. F4.
- ^ n.a. (2019). "Brûlon – 3. L'église Saint-Pierre et Saint-Paul" (PDF). Petites Cités de Caractère de la Sarthe: 9.
- ^ Jouanen, Monique (August 21, 1979). "À la Mòstra del Larzac". Midi-Libre.
- ^ Benedito, Concha S. (1982). 33rd Salon de la Jeune Peinture (Grand Palais, exhibition cat. 20/11-01/12/1982) (in French). Paris: Société de la Jeune Peinture. pp. 109 and 137 (223p.).
- ^ superadmin (2015-10-13). "Une amitié qui traverse le temps". Le Reflet du Lac.
- ^ n.a. (2015-10-03). "Riverin-Arlogos : Les 30 ans". Le Devoir. pp. E9.
- ^ Riverin, Pierre (2015). Les 30 ans de la galerie Riverin-Arlogos : Mariette Teisse-Renc, Jean-Michel Correïa, Daniel Lacomme (exhibition catalog) (in French). Eastman: Arlogos-Riverin Art Contemporain.