Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Acclaimed painter who loved and later left Picasso

- By Jocelyn Noveck

NEW YORK — Françoise Gilot, a prolific and acclaimed painter who produced art for well more than a half-century but was nonetheles­s more famous for her turbulent relationsh­ip with Pablo Picasso — and for leaving him — died June 6 in New York City, where she had lived for decades. She was 101.

Ms, Gilot’s daughter, Aurelia Engel, told The Associated Press her mother had died at Mount Sinai West hospital after suffering both lung and heart problems. “She was an extremely talented artist, and we will be working on her legacy and the incredible paintings and works she is leaving us with,” Ms, Engel said.

The French- born Ms. Gilot had long made her frustratio­n clear that despite acclaim for her art, which she produced from her teenage years until five years ago, she would still be best known for her relationsh­ip with the older Picasso, whom she met in 1943 at age 21, his junior by four decades. The union produced two children — Claude and Paloma Picasso. But unlike the other key women in Picasso’s life — wives or paramours — Ms. Gilot eventually walked out.

“He never saw it coming,” Ms. Engel said of her mother’s departure. “She was there because she loved him and because she really believed in that incredible passion of art which they both shared. (But) she came as a free, though very, very young, but very independen­t person.”

Ms. Gilot herself told The Guardian newspaper in 2016 that “I was not a prisoner” in the relationsh­ip.

“I’d been there of my own will, and I left of my own will,” she said, then 94. “That’s what I told him once, before I left. I said: ‘Watch out, because I came when I wanted to, but I will leave when I want.’ He said, ‘Nobody leaves a man like me.’ I said, ‘We’ll see.’ ”

Ms. Gilot wrote several books, the most famous of which was “Life with Picasso,” written in 1964 with Carlton Lake. An angry Picasso sought unsuccessf­ully to ban its publicatio­n. “He attacked her in court, and he lost three times,” said Ms. Engel, 66, an architect by training who now manages her mother’s archives. But, she said, “after the third loss he called her and said congratula­tions. He fought it, but at the same time, I think he was proud to have been with a woman who had such guts like he had.”

Born on Nov. 26, 1921, in leafy Neuilly-sur-Seine in suburban Paris, Ms. Gilot was an only child. “She knew at the age of five that she wanted to be a painter,” Ms. Engel said. In accordance with her parents’ wishes, she studied law, however, while maintainin­g art as her true passion. She first exhibited her paintings in 1943.

That was the year she met Picasso, by chance, when she and a friend visited a restaurant on the Left Bank, amid a gathering that included his then-companion, Dora Maar.

“I was 21 and I felt that painting was already my whole life,” she writes in “Life With Picasso.” When Picasso asked Ms. Gilot and her friend what they did, the friend responded that they were painters, to which Picasso responded, Ms. Gilot writes: “That’s the funniest thing I’ve heard all day. Girls who look like that can’t be painters.” The two were invited to visit Picasso in his studio, and the relationsh­ip soon began.

Not long after leaving Picasso in 1953, Ms. Gilot reunited with a former friend,

artist Luc Simon, and married him in 1955.

They had a daughter — Ms. Engel — and divorced in 1962. In 1970, Ms. Gilot married Jonas Salk, a former professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and researcher famed for his work with the polio vaccine, and began living between California and Paris, and later New York.

When he died in 1995, Ms. Gilot moved full time to New York and spent her last years on the Upper West Side.

Her art only increased in value over the years. In 2021 her “Paloma à la Guitare” (1965) sold for $1.3 million at a Sotheby’s auction.

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Françoise Gilot

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