Amedeo modigliani cause of death

Jeanne Modigliani

Italian essayist

Jeanne Modigliani (born Giovanna Hébuterne, 29 November – 27 July )[1] was an Italian-French historian of Jewish art mostly known for her biographical research on her father, artist Amedeo Modigliani.

Amedeo modigliani wikipedia Hamnett is in close contact with Modigliani, who was living on the boulevard Raspail, and purchases his drawings--for five francs or less--whenever she can. Eventually he developed his own unique style, one that cannot be adequately categorized with those of other artists. Beatrice Hastings , —, Solomon R. Wikimedia Commons Wikidata item.

In she wrote the book Modigliani: Man and Myth, later translated into English from the Italian by Esther Rowland Clifford.[2]

Early life

Jeanne’s father, Amedeo Modigliani, was an Italian Jewish artist who worked mainly in France. Primarily a figurative artist, he became known for paintings and sculptures in a modern style characterised by mask-like faces (without eyes) and elongation of form.

He died in of tubercular meningitis, exacerbated by poverty, overwork, and addiction to alcohol and narcotics.

Her mother, Jeanne Hébuterne, was a French artist, best known as Amedeo Modigliani's frequent subject and common-law wife.

Amedeo modigliani paintings for sale He was constantly sketching, making as many as a hundred drawings a day. November Modigliani writes to his mother to say that his financial situation is better than before. Critical reactions [ edit ]. Develop and improve services.

When Modigliani died, on January 24, , the twenty-one-year-old Hébuterne was eight months pregnant with their second child. A day after Modigliani's death, Hébuterne was taken to her parents' home. There, inconsolable, deeply depressed, eight months pregnant, and in despair, she threw herself out of a fifth-floor window, killing herself and her unborn second child.

Her daughter, Jeanne, who was named after her, was only 14 months old.

After her parents' deaths the fourteen-month-old orphan Jeanne was brought to Italy and raised by her paternal grandparents and by her paternal aunt, who adopted her, in the Modigliani hometown of Livorno, where she spent her childhood. She then graduated in art history in Florence.[3]

World War II

Jeanne first married the Italian Jewish economist and journalist Mario Cesare Silvio Levi (born ), brother of the more famous Natalia Ginzburg.

Amedeo modigliani wikipedia shqip The rakish stylization and the succulent color were easy to enjoy, and the payoff was sanguinely erotic in a way that endorsed my personal wishes to be bold and tender and noble, overcoming the wimp that I was. Today, he is mostly known for his artistic nudes , which were seen as scandalous at the time. ISBN X. November: Francis Picabia's Dada publication provides an account of the Salon and notes that Modigliani is exhibiting.

She later was identified and persecuted as a Jew by the fascists, fleeing to Paris.[3] During World War II, she participated in the French Resistance. During this time she met another Resistance fighter, Valdemar "Valdi" Nechtschein (his nom de guerre was Victor Leduc), who was also married. They began an affair, and in May , Jeanne gave birth to their daughter, Anne.

Eventually, both divorced their spouses and married one another. Their second daughter together, Laure, was born in

Later life

Jeanne married Mario Levi during the Second World War allegedly to assist Levi’s legal residency in France, they divorced shortly afterwards. Jeanne and Valdemar Nechtschein divorced in

Following a fall that caused a cerebral hemorrhage, Jeanne died in a Paris hospital in [4]

References