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This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| Please note: Artists not classified as American in our database may have limited biographical data
compared to the extensive information about American artists.
Suzanne Eisendieck (1908 - 1988)
She was born in Danzig (now Gdansk, Poland) in 1908 where she went to study at the Academie des Beaux-Arts, later living in Berlin where she held her first exhibition. She came to Paris and began immediately to show her works which found a wide market because of their unique execution, coupled with a concept and a style always original and highly personal. Her impressionist style involves almost tremulous brushstrokes, diffusing the subject's contours.
She has long been famous for her depictions of the girl at a ball, a young woman strolling in the garden, or her children at the seashore. The whole 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, clowns, or flowers – she maintains a remarkable standard of creativity.
Her 'Monet' ladies continue in popularity and Suzanne Eisendieck and her late husband Dietz Edzard, the important impressionist who died in 1963, remain celebrated as two of the greatest exponents of that part of the School of Paris capturing the ultimate in French glamour. She had lived in Paris on the Left Bank in a large apartment hung with impressionist paintings which reflect her own taste and her 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 1988.
Information provided by Ralph Blunt. | |
Biography from Odon Wagner Gallery:
| Please note: Artists not classified as American in our database may have limited biographical data
compared to the extensive information about American artists.
Eisendieck was born in Danzig, Germany (now Gdansk, Poland) in 1908. She exhibited at
the Salon des Independants in 1929. After studying at the
Académie des Beaux-Arts, she participated in two successful exhibitions
in Berlin. She moved to Paris in 1932 where she met the artist
Dietz Edzard, whom she married in 1938.
Eisendieck had her
first solo exhibition at Zak Gallery, Paris, in 1932. She also
had successful exhibitions in London, Montreal (Dominion Gallery), New
York City, and Cologne, as well as joint exhibitions with her husband
in Los Angeles, London, New York City, Chicago, and Palm Beach.
Eisendieck’s
impressionist style involves almost tremulous brushstrokes, diffusing
the subject’s contours. Her paintings exude happiness and are
executed with a symphony of colors.
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