Sonia Lewitska

Sonia Lewitska

Sonia Lewitzka
Born (1874-03-09)9 March 1874
Vilkhivtsi, (Russian Empire), now Khmelnytskyi Oblast, Ukraine
Died 30 October 1937(1937-10-30)
Paris (France)
Nationality Russian; Poland
Known for Painter
Movement Post-Impressionism

Lewitska Sopfia (Sonia) (Polish : Sofia Lewicka, French: Sonia Lewitska, Russian: София (Соня) Филипповна Левицкая; born 9 March 1880 in Vilkhivtsi, (Russian Empire), now Khmelnytskyi Oblast, Ukraine, died 30 September 1937 in Paris)[1] was a Polish woman painter and printmaker working in France.

Biography

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Sonia Lewitska was a Post-Impressionist painter, printmaker and illustrator. She moved to Paris in 1905 to study painting.

Sonia Lewitska engaged in a refined art without losing what a poet called the gift of childhood. Independent, she eschewed all art theory and only investigated the best means of translating her own interior vision into art. Often inspired by Slavic folklore. Lewitska was another early member of the Parisian group. In 1905 she settles in Paris and continued her studies at a Jean Marchand, who later became her husband. Beginning as a cubist and fauvist, she moved into a Post-Impressionist style and became known for her illustrations of limited edition books.

She exhibited at the Salon d'Automne (1910–1913, 1919–1925, 1927–1934), the Salon des Indépendants (1910–1914, 1920–1922),[2] the Section d'Or,[3] the Salon des Tuileries (1929, 1932, 1933), the Paris galleries аnd at the International exhibitions.

In 1933 she took part in Salon de Echanges. At the same time, in accompany with her friend Henriette Tirman, she helps André Fau and Francis Thieck[4] in room decoration suggesting services of painters from her closest circle: Raoul Dufy, André Lhote, André Hellé (1871–1945) and Jean Marchand. Thereby she supported her friends in tough times of economic crisis in the country.[5]

In 1937, Henriette Tirman with friends creates in her house the Society of Friends Sonia Lewitska, which organized in 1938 two retrospective exhibitions of the artist in the Gallery Sagot – Le Garrec.[6][7]

Illustrations

Other illustrations (ref no.1)

References

Notes

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