Pierrette Bloch

Pierrette Bloch
Born 1928
Movement Modern art
Awards prix Maratier 2005 de la Fondation Pro-MAHJ

Pierrette Bloch is a painter and textile artist of Swiss nationality born in Paris in 1928. Just over a decade later, in 1939, Bloch and her parents left France for Switzerland to escape the war. At the age of 15, she began living on her own in a hotel, which she says helped foster very early on a complete sense of independence and autonomy. She began her professional artistic training at the end of the 1940s, taking courses in the plastic arts in Paris. During the next decade she began showing her works in Paris and the United States. The ensemble of her works have their roots in the use of "poor" materials such as ink, paper, mesh, and horsehair. The last of these, horsehair, began appearing in her work in the 1970s, with her first sculpture using horsehair created in 1979, and have become one of the key symbols of her work. The corpus of her work thus spans mediums, including drawings, collages and three-dimensional pieces, and falls into the category of postwar abstraction. Her work has been exhibited in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Today, she is one of the biggest figures in contemporary French painting.

A monograph on Pierrette Bloch was published in November 2013 by Musée Jenisch.

Biography

Key Expositions

Public Collections

Quotations

« J’entreprends un long voyage sur une feuille, je m’enveloppe dans ce parcours ; ce n’est plus une surface, mais une aventure dans le temps. Le format n’existe plus. » ("I undertake a long voyage on a sheet of paper, I envelop myself in the journey; it's no longer a surface, but an adventure in time. The format of the work ceases to exist.")[2]

Notes and references

  1. "EXPOSITION / Pierrette Bloch en grand à Vevey". Bilan. Retrieved 2016-03-06.
  2. D’après un texte de Marguerite Pilven dans Paris-art.
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