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Observations placeholder

Toulouse Lautrec - Suzanne Valadon - The Hangover

Identifier

010599

Type of Spiritual Experience

Background

Quote from the Times

Artists’ lovers, it seems, have a canny knack of being able to look after themselves. The most triumphant example is Suzanne Valadon, who dallied with Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in fin-de-siècle Paris. A laundress’s daughter, Valadon lived in the same building as Lautrec and for several years became one of his favourite subjects for his vibrant depictions of Montmartre's low life.

In The Hangover (1888), which shows a woman looking sad and sozzled, Valadon is not identified as the artist’s lover. Instead, the title suggests she is just one of many demi-mondaines. So when Lautrec refused to marry her you might have expected her to slink into the gutter. In fact, rather than downing another pichet of rough red, she began to paint. Eventually she became a significant artist in her own right.

You could call it the models’ version of a happy ending.

A description of the experience

The source of the experience

Toulouse Lautrec

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Activities

Overloads

Alcoholism
Autoimmune diseases

Commonsteps

References