Suzanne Eisendieck was born in Dantzig, Germany in 1906, and died in Paris, France in 1998.
Suzanne Eisendieck was born in Dantzig, Germany in 1906, where she studied at the Academie des Beaux-Arts, She later lived in Berlin where she held her first exhibition. She came to Paris, and began immediately to show her paintings. Because of their unique execution, coupled with a concept and a style always original and highly personal her paintings became very popular. Her impressionistic style involves almost tremulous brushstrokes, diffusing the subject’s contours. Her paintings exude happiness and are executed with symphony of colors.
Eisendieck has long been famous for her depictions of young girls at ‘the ball’, a young woman strolling in the garden, or herself with her children at the seashore. The art world has come to recognize the identity of her characterizations , which became tradition. Whether painting her favorite theme of mother and child in various settings, a landscape with figures, or flowers – she maintained a remarkable standard of creativity.
Suzanne Eisendieck and her late husband Dietz Edzard, impressionist, who died in 1963, remain celebrated as two of the exponents of that part of the School of Paris capturing the ultimate in French glamour. They lived in Paris on the Left Bank in a large apartment hung with impressionist paintings which reflected their own taste and their great success.
Suzanne Eisendieck is recorded in E. Benezit, “Dictionnaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs, et Graveurs,” which notes that she has been exhibiting in Paris since 1929 at the Salon des Independants.
She died in Paris, France in 1998.
EXHIBITIONS:
London
-Leicester Galleries, 1933-1935, 1938
-O’Hana Gallery, 1956
New York
-Arnot Gallery, 1959 to 1998, on permanent exhibition
-Marie Harriman Gallery, 1937 – 1939 –1940
-Pearls Galleries, 1948
-Hammer Galleries, 1959
Paris
-Galerie Benezit, 1942
-Galerie Petrides, 1955
Los Angeles
– Gallery Vigeveno, 1950
Cologne
-Galerie Abels, 1962
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