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Location:
1468 Marine Dr., West Vancouver, Canada
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Jeanne
Hébuterne
represented
twice - one wears a big hat, the other has a red dress and
a necklace
She was Modigliani's biggest love, the only one he regarded
as his wife, though they were never married; a mysterious,
introspective girl, shy, sweet, and like Modi - romantic.
They met when she was still an art student. Jeanne was a
well brought up daughter of a rigid, bourgeois family, who
never approved of Amedeo, who was not only a penniless artist
but a foreigner and a Jew. Their intolerance and heartlessness
contributed to her suicide the day after Modi's death.
Amedeo painted at least 25 portraits of her, she gave him
a baby, Giovanna - later the author of Modiglani's most
popular biography.
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Leopold
Zborowski and Hanka Zborowska
the couple
represented on the wall.
A couple, among the closest friends of Modi, who fed
him, supported him financially and truly believed in his
talent. Zbo became his art dealer and never spared himself
trying to sell Modi's paintings even if it looked impossible.
Zbo was a Polish poet, a romantic ready to sacrifice everything
for Modi.
Hanka Zborowska, Zbo's aristocratic wife was painted
by Modi many times.
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Moïse
Kisling
in the burgundy sweater, red tie, black eyes, black hair
Painter,
a close friend of Modi, known for generosity and a great
sense of humour. His exuberance and magnificent gestures
endeared him to Modigliani. Once Moïse sold a painting and
spent all the money the same day on flowers, which he gave
to women passing by, young or old, just to make them smile.
He got his education in Fine Arts in Cracow, Poland, where
he was born.
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Renée
Kisling
the woman
with short red hair and blue suit
Like her
husband, a chronic party giver. A daughter of a French officer,
she very much enjoyed the bohemian lifestyle. Renée often
quarreled with Modigliani though she liked his company.
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Chaim
Soutine
the man
in a green suit with a crooked tie
A painter
totally dedicated to his art, he was born as one of eleven
children to a poor Jewish family in a village near Minsk.
His miserable childhood left him an abnormally shy and frightened
man.
I call him a painter of smelly subjects - dead chickens,
dead cows, decaying bodies. De
facto not
only did his still - lives stink, but he stunk as well.
He had the reputation for being the dirtiest artist on Montmartre.
Soutine was introduced to the "ceremony" of brushing teeth
very, very late.
Knowing that Madame Zborowska couldn't stand Soutine's smelly
presence, Modigliani painted Chaim's portrait on her salon
door as a joke, making her furious. One day the Zborowskis
sold that door for good money. Modi took a paternal interest
in Soutine and was one of the first to appreciate his raw
talent. Modi insisted that Zborowski take him under his
protection, which is what he did.
Soutine unlike Modigliani, lived long enough to enjoy prosperity
and even to became famous for wild extravagances.
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Max
Jacob
the bold
man in the gray suit
A fine poet,
a brilliant literate mind with an abrasive wit. Max
earned his reputation for his hilarious buffoonery. He was
able to hear Modi out and appreciate his talent.
For a while he lived together with Picasso in a tiny room
with one bed. Picasso painted during the nights as
Max slept.
As did so many Jews, Max vanished in a concentration camp
during the war.
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All
designs belong to Gereb Design Inc. and may not be copied or reproduced
without written permission from Gereb Design Inc.
Copyright
© 2000 Gereb Design Inc.
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