Produced in a limited edition of 1,500, this small booklet was issued to accompany her solo show Niki de Saint Phalle: L'Invitation au Museé. Dancing female forms in a multitude of fluorescent colors are the theme for this artist's book, which comprises 10 original screen prints on vellum and an illustrated composition in black on tracing paper.. Sadly, ironically, Niki de Saint Phalle's own transformative experience with the garden may have led to her death. She was 71 when she died in 2002 of respiratory failure — her lungs possibly.

Niki de Saint Phalle A Nana Public art, Art design, Pluto the dog

무료 이미지 풍선, 휴양, 화려한, 장난감, 시골뜨기, 조각, 미술, 그림, 분수, 복장, 나나, 팽창 식, 니키 데 생 파알 2448x3264 1413757

Niki de Saint Phalle Sculpture Art

Niki de Saint Phalle, une sacrée nana ! Elles osent

Niki de Saint Phalle, Nana Soleil 81/150

Les sculptures de Niki de Saint Phalle et le Jardin des Tarots

Untitled (Nana, Fountain Figure) Lot 425

2014/10/10 17h55 Niki de Saint Phalle, «Elisabeth» (1965) Exposition Niki de Saint Phalle

L'arte di Niki de Saint Phalle

The Tarot Garden Minnie Muse

Niki de SaintPhalle Lot Mannequin art, Sculpture art, Female art
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Exposition Niki de SaintPhalle au Grand Palais

Les voluptueuses «nanas» de Niki de Saint Phalle à Washington Jean Tinguely, Robert Rauschenberg

Niki de saint Phalle Les Nanas. Paris 2014, exposition du grand Palais Escultura
Niki de SaintPhalle L’ère des nanas

Niki de saint phalle,les nanas, les danseuses Autres

TwoMinute Art History Niki de Saint Phalle and Her Serious Frivolity Artists Network

Niki de Saint Phalle and the Nana Statues Art History Stories
Niki de Saint Phalle Nana Dawn (1993) MutualArt

2014/09/19 17h20 Niki de Saint Phalle, «Nana danseuse (Rou… Flickr
A new exhibition at Galerie Mitterrand opens on 24 October 2014 featuring a selection of Saint Phalles' infamous Nanas. The show titled "Nanas 60s-90s" illustrates an evolution of the Nanas from their beginnings made from chicken wire shapes covered with fabric patches, wool and resin, to a time when technology permitted smooth forms and heightened colors giving them their more commonly.. "Ready! On your marks! Red, yellow, blue, the painting weeps, the painting is dead. I've killed the painting." 1 So declared the self-taught artist Niki de Saint Phalle, who caught the attention of the French art scene and the popular press in February 1961 when she staged her first Tirs or Shooting Paintings. For this project, Saint Phalle created assemblages on wooden boards with items.