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ALICE BAILLY

'Alice Bailly' (February 25, 1872 - January 1 1938) was a radical Swiss painter, know for her interpretation of cubism and her multimedia wool paintings.

Contents
Education and early career
"Wool paintings"
Later life
External link

Education and early career


Bailly was born in Geneva, Switzerland, where she attended separate classes for women at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, studying under Hugues Bovy and Denise Sarkiss. She also went on to study in Munich, Germany. By 1906 she had moved to Paris, where she befriended a number of notable modernist painters such as Juan Gris, Francis Picabia, Albert Gleizes, Jean Metzinger, Fernand Léger, Sonia Lewitska and Marie Laurencin.
==Fauvism and Cubism==
While in Paris she became interested in fauvism, and showed some paintings in the style at the Salon d'Automne alongside principal painters of the movement. By the time she was 39, Bailly had developed her own variation on cubism and her work was selected for an international traveling show.

"Wool paintings"


At the beginning of World War I, Bailly returned to Switzerland and invented her signature ''tableaux-laine'' or "wool paintings" in which short strands of colored yarn acted as brush strokes. Between 1913 and 1922 she made approximately fifty paintings in this style. She was also briefly involved with the Dada movement.

Later life


She moved to Lausanne in 1923 and remained there for the rest of her life. She was commissioned to paint eight large murals for the foyer of the Theatre of Lausanne in 1936. This task led to exhaustion which may have contributed to the tuberculosis that caused her death in 1938. Her will directed that the proceeds from the sale of her art be used to establish a trust fund to aid young Swiss artists.

External link



★ National Museum of Women in the Arts. Alice Bailly

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