Sonia DELAUNAY (1885-1979)

Sonia Delaunay was born in Russia and arrived in France in 1905. She married Robert Delaunay in 1910. Their union was enhanced by mutual inspiration and joint research on movement and colour. They were both particularly interested in Eugène Chevreul’s colour theory published in 1839 entitled ‘The Law of Simultaneous Colour Contrast’.

  • Selection of works currently available | Read more
  • Sonia Delaunay: the strength of the color | Read more

Selection of works by Sonia Delaunay currently available

Sonia Delaunay, Rythme couleur, 1965, Gouache
Rythme couleur
1965
Gouache
41 x 31 cm

 

Sonia Delaunay, Rythme couleur
Rythme couleur
23 juin 1975
Gouache and black chalk on paper
Signed, dated, and dedicated lower right
Numbered lower left
51,5 x 39,5 cm

 

Price upon request. Contact us.

 


Sonia Delaunay: the strength of the color

Sonia Delaunay was born in Russia and arrived in France in 1905. She married Robert Delaunay in 1910. Their union was enhanced by mutual inspiration and joint research on movement and colour. They were both particularly interested in Eugène Chevreul’s colour theory published in 1839 entitled ‘The Law of Simultaneous Colour Contrast’.

Their painting set up a colourful structure that then became both the form and the subject of their work. They created a non-objective painting style that tried to express the rhythm of modern society and ended in 1912 with pure and abstract painting. Their paintings were then called Orphic Cubism by Guillaume Apollinaire that applied to works that celebrate life by focusing their research on the manifestations of light, seen as an original creator principle.

After the death of Robert Delaunay in 1941, she continued his experiments. She is the first woman to have had a retrospective at the Bing Gallery in 1953.

 

From 17 October 2014 to 22 February 201, the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris organized  the first major Sonia Delaunay retrospective in Paris since 1967, with three remarkably recreated environments and over 400 works: paintings, wall decorations, gouaches, prints, fashion items and textiles.

Director: Fabrice Hergott
Curator: Anne Montfort et Cécile Godefroy

This exhibition was shown at Tate Modern in London between 15 April and 9 August 2015. This was the first UK retrospective to assess the breadth of her vibrant artistic practice across a wide range of media.
A catalogue of 256 pages was also published by Paris Musées.