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Alice Prin

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Name
  
Alice Prin


Role
  
Artist's model

Alice Prin httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcom736x9ba6e3

Died
  
April 29, 1953, Montparnasse, Paris, France

Movies
  
The Starfish, Emak‑Bakia, Ballet Mecanique, Le Retour a la Raison

Similar People
  
Man Ray, Tsuguharu Foujita, Fernand Leger, Dudley Murphy, Josephine Baker

Muse kiki de montparnasse


Alice Ernestine Prin (2 October 1901 – 29 April 1953), nicknamed Queen of Montparnasse, and often known as Kiki de Montparnasse, was a French artist's model, nightclub singer, actress, memoirist, and painter. She flourished in, and helped define, the liberated culture of Paris in the 1920s.

Contents

Alice Prin Alice Prin Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Alice prin


Early life

Alice Prin The Muse of Montparnasse ineedartandcoffee

Alice Prin was born in Châtillon-sur-Seine, Côte d'Or. An illegitimate child, she was raised in abject poverty by her grandmother. At age twelve, she was sent to live with her mother in Paris in order to find work. She first worked in shops and bakeries, but by the age of fourteen, she was posing nude for sculptors, which created discord with her mother.

Notoriety begins

Alice Prin The Muse of Montparnasse ineedartandcoffee

Adopting a single name, "Kiki", she became a fixture in the Montparnasse social scene and a popular artist's model, posing for dozens of artists, including Sanyu (painter), Chaim Soutine, Julian Mandel, Tsuguharu Foujita, Constant Detré, Francis Picabia, Jean Cocteau, Arno Breker, Alexander Calder, Per Krohg, Hermine David, Pablo Gargallo, Mayo, and Tono Salazar. Moise Kisling painted a portrait of Kiki titled Nu assis, one of his best known.

Alice Prin ModelMayhemcom An homage to favorite models

Her companion for most of the 1920s was Man Ray, who made hundreds of portraits of her. She is the subject of some of his best-known images, including the notable surrealist image Le violon d'Ingres and Noire et blanche.

Alice Prin Kiki de Montaparnasse szalona muza Parya Sylwia

She appeared in nine short and often experimental films, including Fernand Léger's Ballet Mécanique without any credit.

Artwork and autobiography

Alice Prin Kiki de Montparnasse o Alice Ernestine Prin YouTube

A painter in her own right, in 1927 Prin had a sold-out exhibition of her paintings at the Galerie au Sacre du Printemps in Paris. Signing her work with her chosen single name, Kiki, she usually noted the year. Her drawings and paintings comprise portraits, self-portraits, social activities, fanciful animals, and dreamy landscapes composed in a light, slightly uneven, expressionist style that is a reflection of her easy-going manner and boundless optimism.

Her autobiography was published in 1929 as Kiki's Memoirs, with Ernest Hemingway and Tsuguharu Foujita providing introductions. In 1930 the book was translated by Samuel Putnam and published in Manhattan by Black Manikin Press, but it was immediately banned by the United States government. A copy of the first US edition was held in the section for banned books in the New York Public Library through the 1970s. However, the book had been reprinted under the title The Education of a Young Model throughout the 1950s and 1960s (e.g., a 1954 edition by Bridgehead has the Hemingway Introduction and photos and illustrations by Mahlon Blaine). These editions were mainly put out by Samuel Roth. Taking advantage of the fact that the banning of the book meant it did not receive copyright protection in the U.S., Roth put out a series of supposedly copyrighted editions (which were never registered with the Library of Congress) which altered the text and added illustrations – line drawings and photographs – which were not by Prin. Editions published in and after 1955 include an extra 10 chapters supposedly written by Prin 23 years after the original book, including a visit to New York where she meets with Samuel Roth and Ernest Hemingway; none of this was true. The original autobiography finally saw a new translation and publication in 1996.

Her music hall performances in black hose and garters included crowd-pleasing risqué songs, which were uninhibited, yet inoffensive. For a few years during the 1930s, she owned the Montparnasse cabaret L'Oasis, which was later renamed "Chez Kiki."

A symbol of bohemian and creative Paris, at age of twenty-eight she was declared the Queen of Montparnasse. Even during difficult times, she maintained her positive attitude, saying "all I need is an onion, a bit of bread, and a bottle of red [wine]; and I will always find somebody to offer me that."

She left Paris to avoid the occupying German army during World War II, which entered the city in June 1940. She did not return to live in the city immediately after the war.

Death and legacy

Prin died in 1953 after collapsing outside her flat in Montparnasse, at the age of fifty-one, apparently of complications of alcoholism or drug dependence. A large crowd of artists and fans attended her Paris funeral and followed the procession to her interment in the Cimetière du Montparnasse. Her tomb identifies her as "Kiki, 1901–1953, singer, actress, painter, Queen of Montparnasse." Tsuguharu Foujita has said that, with Kiki, the glorious days of Montparnasse were buried forever.

Long after her death, Prin remains the embodiment of the outspokenness, audacity, and creativity that marked that period of life in Montparnasse. In 1989, biographers Billy Klüver and Julie Martin called her "one of the century's first truly independent women." In her honor, a daylily has been named Kiki de Montparnasse.

Kiki was featured in a three-page obituary in Life magazine in the 29 June 1953 edition.

Filmography

  • 1923 : L'Inhumaine by Marcel L'Herbier
  • 1923 : Le Retour à la Raison by Man Ray, short film
  • 1923 : Ballet Mécanique by Fernand Léger, short film
  • 1923 : Entr'acte by René Clair, short film
  • 1923 : La Galerie des Monstres by Jaque Catelain
  • 1926 : Emak-Bakia by Man Ray, short film
  • 1928 : L'Étoile de mer by Man Ray
  • 1928 : Paris express or Souvenirs de Paris by Pierre Prévert et Marcel Duhamel, short film
  • 1930 : Le Capitaine jaune by Anders Wilhelm Sandberg
  • 1933 : Cette vieille canaille by Anatole Litvak
  • Alice prin kiki de montparnasse r anzovino


    References

    Alice Prin Wikipedia


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