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Suzanne Valadon — Nu (ébauche)
Suzanne Valadon — Nu (ébauche)
Suzanne Valadon — Nu (ébauche)
Suzanne Valadon

Nu (ébauche)

This oil on canvas presents Suzanne Valadon at her most direct and searching, capturing the female nude in a state of unfinished resolution that paradoxically feels entirely complete. Working at roughly 29 by 24 inches, Valadon brings her characteristic combination of unsparing observation and graphic confidence to a composition that refuses conventional idealization. The designation ébauche acknowledges the sketch-like quality of the handling, yet the work demonstrates the same bold contour and psychological presence that distinguished her from contemporaries working in similar subject matter. Her background as a model and acrobat, together with her self-taught formation as a painter under the informal guidance of Toulouse-Lautrec and Degas, gave Valadon an approach to the human body that was grounded in lived experience rather than academic tradition. The provenance of this work places it within a deeply personal circle. The canvas passed first through the collection of André Utter, the painter who became Valadon's companion and husband, making it a work that remained close to its origins before entering the Collection Lafoy in Lyon and subsequently a private collection in Troyes, where it was held from the 1980s onward. This intimate lineage lends the painting a rare sense of continuity with the world in which it was made. The work was also exhibited at the Musée de Brou in Bourg-en-Bresse in the summer of 1965, included in the survey Utrillo Valadon Utter devoted to the Saint-Bernard period, further confirming its scholarly standing and the seriousness with which it has been regarded by institutional voices. For collectors focused on early twentieth century French painting, Nu (ébauche) offers access to Valadon in an unusually candid register. The work is signed, carries strong exhibition history, and arrives with provenance traceable to the artist's own household, all conditions that are increasingly rare for her paintings as they become more closely held and less frequently available.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Signed
Yes

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About this work

Suzanne Valadon, Nu (ébauche)

This oil on canvas presents Suzanne Valadon at her most direct and searching, capturing the female nude in a state of unfinished resolution that paradoxically feels entirely complete. Working at roughly 29 by 24 inches, Valadon brings her characteristic combination of unsparing observation and graphic confidence to a composition that refuses conventional idealization. The designation ébauche acknowledges the sketch-like quality of the handling, yet the work demonstrates the same bold contour and psychological presence that distinguished her from contemporaries working in similar subject matter. Her background as a model and acrobat, together with her self-taught formation as a painter under the informal guidance of Toulouse-Lautrec and Degas, gave Valadon an approach to the human body that was grounded in lived experience rather than academic tradition. The provenance of this work places it within a deeply personal circle. The canvas passed first through the collection of André Utter, the painter who became Valadon's companion and husband, making it a work that remained close to its origins before entering the Collection Lafoy in Lyon and subsequently a private collection in Troyes, where it was held from the 1980s onward. This intimate lineage lends the painting a rare sense of continuity with the world in which it was made. The work was also exhibited at the Musée de Brou in Bourg-en-Bresse in the summer of 1965, included in the survey Utrillo Valadon Utter devoted to the Saint-Bernard period, further confirming its scholarly standing and the seriousness with which it has been regarded by institutional voices. For collectors focused on early twentieth century French painting, Nu (ébauche) offers access to Valadon in an unusually candid register. The work is signed, carries strong exhibition history, and arrives with provenance traceable to the artist's own household, all conditions that are increasingly rare for her paintings as they become more closely held and less frequently available.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Leclere

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Collected by

Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, Cleveland Museum of Art