Paule vezelay

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[edit] Vézelay, Paule (Marjorie Watson-Williams)

[edit] (1892 - 1984)

[edit] Celebrated British female abstract artist

[edit] (bn. Marjorie Watson-Williams)

Paule Vézelay was born as Marjorie Watson-Williams in 1892 in Bristol. After studying in London she visited Paris in 1920, and a few years later decided to live there. She mixed with many famous artists of the School of Paris, and adopted a French name. From 1929 to 1932 Vézelay lived with Andre Masson, and at this early date her work was already moving towards abstract floating shapes.

In 1934 she joined the group Abstraction-Creation, and formed lifelong friendships with Sophie Tauber-Arp and Jean Arp. Her paintings at this time became 'studies of harmony, balance, spacing and rhythmical contrast executed in clear contrasting colours or black and white' (Ronald Alley, Paule Vezelay, Tate Gallery. 1983). She also wrote articles and worked in three dimensions, making plaster sculptures and avant-garde constructions known as 'Lines in Space' which were first exhibited in Paris in 1937.

World War Two forced Vézelay to return to Bristol where she made drawings of war damage, particularly inspired by the shapes of barrage balloons. After the war she stayed in England, and although she founded the British branch of the Group Espace she never became part of the London Art scene, living a secluded life. In the years that followed she designed many successful textiles for Heals and continued to create charcoal drawings, constructions, pastels, paintings and prints until her death in 1984.

Her work is represented in museums and public collections in Britain and abroad including Tate; The British Museum; The Imperial War Museum; The National Portrait Gallery London; The Victoria & Albert Museum; The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; The Kunst Museum, Basel; The Australian National Gallery; and the Arts Council of Great Britain. A plaque resides outside her Bristol residence - 2 Rodney Place, Clifton - now accommodation for University of Bristol students.

Sources: Grosvenor Gallery London "www.grosvenorgallery.com", England&Co Contemporary Art Gallery "www.englandgallery.com"