Jacqueline Lamba
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacqueline Lamba Breton (sometimes "Jacqueline Lamba" or "Jacqueline Lambra-Breton")[1](1910 - 1993) was a French[2] (one source has "American")[3] painter perhaps best known as the second wife of André Breton and "the subject of many of his poems".[4]
She and Breton would have a daughter, Aube Elléouët Breton.
She and Breton separated in 1943; she would later marry David Hare, an American sculptor.[5]
She participated in "the Surrealist Movement between 1934-1947."[6]
For the last five years of her life, she had Alzheimer's disease.[7][8]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Claude Cahun - Chronology. Retrieved on 2007-10-18.
- ^ Jacqueline Lamba Breton. Retrieved on 2007-10-18.
- ^ Jacqueline Lamba on Arnet.
- ^ Jacqueline Lamba Breton Biography
- ^ Jacqueline Lamba Breton Biograpy
- ^ SALOMON GRIMBERG, M.D.. Dallas Society for Psychoanalytic Psychology and the Dallas Museum of Art present "Jacqueline Lamba: A Female Surrealist" -Lecture. Retrieved on 2007-10-18.
- ^ Jacqueline Lamba Breton Biography (1910-1993)
- ^ Gadfly Online.. Retrieved on 2007-10-18.