Francoise Gilot, who died last Tuesday aged 101, survived what she called the “hell” of being Spanish Artist Pablo Picasso’s mistress and muse to become a renowned artist in her own right.
The Picasso Museum in Paris confirmed her death to AFP after the New York Times reported Gilot had passed away following recent heart and lung ailments.
While two of the other women in Picasso’s life died by suicide, and two others had mental breakdowns, Gilot stood up to the giant of modern art and was the only woman to leave him of her own accord.
Gilot was 21 and a budding painter when she first met Picasso, who was 40 years her senior and married to Russian dancer Khokhlova, in occupied France during World War II. At the time of the meeting, he was also the lover of the French photographer, painter, and poet Maar.
The meeting took place in a Paris restaurant in the spring of 1943 when he brought a bowl of cherries to her table and an invitation to visit his studio.
Lovers for 10 years, they never married but had two children, a son, Claude, born in 1947, and a daughter, Paloma, in 1949.
He often painted her, portraying her as the radiant and haughty “Woman-Flower” in 1946. In “Femme assize” (1949), which sold for £8.5 million ($9.6 million) at auction in London in 2012, he depicted her while heavily pregnant with Paloma.
In 1948, photographer Robert Capa captured the couple on a beach, with Picasso playing in the sand with his son, dutifully carrying a shade over Gilot’s head.
When she decided to walk out on him in 1953 and resume painting he took it badly.
He told her she was headed “straight for the desert”. From then on his entourage snubbed her and her work.
As she developed, she increasingly produced minimalist, colorful works and over her career signed at least 1,600 canvasses and 3,600 works on paper.
In her 1964 book “Life with Picasso” she portrayed him as a tyrant. Picasso failed in a legal bid to get the book banned and retaliated by refusing to see her and their children.
She also wrote a book in 1991 on Picasso’s complicated love-hate relationship with the other giant of modern art, Matisse, with whom she was friends.
The two other men in her life were painter Luc Simon, with whom she had a daughter Aurelia, and American virologist Jonas Salk, inventor of the first polio vaccine, whom she married in 1970 and lived with in California until he died in 1995.
Gilot spent the last years of her life in New York, where she continued painting into her nineties.
In 2021 her painting “Paloma a la Guitare”, a 1965 portrait of her daughter, sold for $1.3 million at Sotheby’s in London.
Her work graced the walls of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, as well as the Centre Pompidou in Paris.