No 798 by Jean Marguerite Frey-Surbek

No 798 by Jean Marguerite Frey-Surbek

No 798

Jean Marguerite Frey-Surbek

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Title

No 798

 
Artist
Year
c. 1920  
Technique
Oil painting on stretched linen canvas 
Image Size
13 1/8 x 16 1/8" canvas 
Signature
"M Frey-Surbek" in pigment in lower left; signed on the stretcher bars, verso. 
Edition Size
 
Annotations
on the verso: artist's studio address label, exhibition number 798, and partially illegible dedication in ink to "Pour ---- Sybille Nussbaum, Mars 1977, tu souvenir ------- Marguerite Frey-Surbek" 
Reference
 
Paper
 
State
 
Publisher
 
Inventory ID
23444 
Price
$2,000.00 
Description

Marguerite Frey-Surbek did this expressive painting of pansies and a watering can around 1920, channeling the floral experiments of Nolde, Fantin-Latour, Kistler and other modernist painters of the time.

There is an exhibition label on the verso with the artist's name and Bern address as well as the 'No 798' and a dedication to Sybille Nussbaum, dated March of 1977, probably the date that the painting was gifted or sold to Ms. Nussbaum.

Marguerite Frey-Surbek, born in Delémont, Switzerland on February 23, 1886, was the daughter of the forester and descendant of an old Basel councilor family Jean-Albert Frey and his wife Lisa Juliette, née Calame. Margurite grew up in Delémont until the family moved to Bern in 1893. Frey later attended the arts annd crafts school there for two years and became a private student of Paul Klee from 1904 to 1906. On Klee's advice she studied from 1906 to 1911 at the Académie Ranson with Lucien Simon, Félix Vallotton, Maurice Denis and Édouard Vuillard and got to know her future husband, Swiss painter Victor Surbek. After marrying in 1914, the couple ran a painting school in Bern from 1915 to 1931, where Serge Brignoni , Max Böhlen and Ernst Braker were students. In Bern she created frescoes in the stairwell of the Bern trade school.

Initially Frey mainly painted portraits, evolving later to landscapes and still lifes. In spring and summer she worked mostly in Iseltwald on Lake Brienz, the rest of the year in Bern. She traveled often and stayed in other European countries and America for longer periods. Her stay in Calabria, Italy in 1932 greatly influenced her, helping her to find new color tones.

Marguerite Frey-Surbek was also socially and politically involved. So she founded the first day care center for girls in Bern, helped in refugee camps during the WWII, fought for women's right to vote, and petitioned for the protection of Bern's old town and the preservation of the Brienzersee landscape. From 1942 to 1948 she was a member of the Federal Art Commission (EKK) and before and beyond that she was a member of the Bern section of the Swiss Society of Female Artists (SGBK).

Marguerite Frey-Surbek died in Bern on May 17, 1981.

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.