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Throughout her life, French-born Francoise Gilot has combined artistic
talent with academic achievement. When she was five years old her
mother provided her with a set of watercolor paints and instructions.
Her father obligated her to study international law. He was so demanding
that he taught her to read Baudelaire when she had insomnia. At
the age of twenty-one she left the University of Paris to study
art at the Academie Julian. After earning a Bachelor of Arts degree
in Philosophy from the Sorbonne and a degree in English from Cambridge,
she began to express herself through painting and other art forms.
From 1946 to 1953 she worked with Picasso, learning, teaching and
sharing the wealth of his tremendous talent. During this time she
also worked with Henri Matisse, developing a strong friendship with
the elderly painter. She lived with Picasso and bore him two children.
Since 1951, Gilot has had one-woman shows in every major gallery
in the world. She has also illustrated four books of her poems and
has acted as a visiting professor of the Department of Painting,
Drawing and Etching at the University of California at Idyllwild.
Aswell, Francoise Gilot maintains a studio in New York City.
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