Seeing Baya: Portrait of an Algerian Artist in Paris

Author:   Alice Kaplan
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226835082


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   15 October 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Seeing Baya: Portrait of an Algerian Artist in Paris


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Overview

The first biography of the Algerian artist Baya Mahieddine, celebrated in mid-twentieth-century Paris, her life shrouded in myth. On a flower farm in colonial Algeria, a servant and field worker named Baya escaped the drudgery of her labor by coloring the skirts in fashion magazines. Three years later, in November 1947, her paintings and fanciful clay beasts were featured in a one-woman show at the Maeght Gallery in Paris. She wasn't yet sixteen years old. Alice Kaplan tells the story of a young woman seemingly trapped in subsistence who becomes a sensation of the French capital, then mysteriously fades from the history of modern art—only to reemerge after independence as an icon of Algerian artistic heritage. The toast of Paris for the 1947 season, Baya inspired colonialist fantasies about her ""primitive genius"" as well as genuine appreciation. She was featured in newspapers, radio, and a newsreel; her art was praised by Breton and Camus, Matisse and Braque. At the dawn of Algerian liberation, her appearance in Paris was used to stage the illusion of French-Algerian friendship, while horrific French massacres in Algeria were still fresh in memory. Kaplan uncovers the central figures in Baya's life and the role they played in her artistic career. Among the most poignant was Marguerite Caminat-McEwen-Benhoura, who took Baya from her sister's farm to Algiers to work as her maid and gave her paint and brushes. A complex and endearing character, Marguerite's Pygmalion ambitions were decisive in determining Baya's destiny. Kaplan also looks closely at Baya's earliest paintings with an eye to their themes, their palette and design, and their enduring influence. In vivid prose that brings Baya's story into the present, Kaplan's book, the fruit of scrupulous research in Algiers, Blida, Paris, and Provence, allows us to see in a whole new light the beloved artist who signed her paintings simply ""Baya.""

Full Product Details

Author:   Alice Kaplan
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.567kg
ISBN:  

9780226835082


ISBN 10:   0226835081
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   15 October 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

"""In the story of Baya Mahieddine, Alice Kaplan sees into the difficulty of seeing across cultures and across time. How did Baya, celebrated as a child genius in Paris in 1947, see the French people who took her up? How did they see her? Kaplan reads into Baya’s gloriously colorful art a record of intimate life as well as the fury and complexity of the Algerian War for Independence. A delicate and intensely moving tale, and a tribute to a powerful artist.""   -- Rosanna Warren, author of Max Jacob: A Life in Art and Letters"


"""In the story of Baya Mahieddine, Alice Kaplan sees into the difficulty of vision across cultures and across time. How did Baya, celebrated as a child genius in Paris in 1947, see the French people who took her up? How did they see her? Kaplan reads into Baya’s gloriously colorful art a record of intimate life as well as the fury and complexity of the Algerian War for Independence. A delicate and intensely moving tale, and a tribute to a powerful artist.""   -- Rosanna Warren, author of Max Jacob: A Life in Art and Letters ""Part biography, part microhistory, and part reverie, Alice Kaplan’s Seeing Baya reveals a whole world in the story of one forgotten woman. By turning the lens on Baya Mahieddine, a talented Algerian painter of humble origins who made her way into the salons of Paris and the pages of Vogue magazine, Kaplan shows that 'seeing Baya' is seeing the true power of art—its pleasure and its promise. Against the backdrop of France’s brutal colonial assault on Algeria, Kaplan recreates in painstaking detail the life and times of an artist finding her own voice, and her own life, despite the odds. An accomplished historian, Kaplan brings to this book her signature rigorous research and beautiful pen. The result, much like Baya’s canvases, is an utter delight.""    -- James McAuley, author of The House of Fragile Things ""At the Maeght gallery in Paris, on the twenty-first of November, 1947, a fifteen-year-old child prodigy named Baya revealed her astonishing mastery of an intensely colored and patterned artistic universe. Generations of Algerians, myself included, have felt close to Baya’s work, yet we have never really understood the courage and talent of a painter and sculptor whose beginnings were so dazzling. In a captivating quest, meticulous, tender, and careful to preserve Baya’s intimate secrets, Alice Kaplan guides us in the discovery of the beginnings of a very great artist.""   -- Hajar Bali, playwright and novelist ""The myth of Baya Mahieddine, an Algerian maid-turned-artist who burst on the Paris scene at the age of 15, attracting the admiration of everyone from André Breton to Pablo Picasso, is so compelling that it has overshadowed the life of the artist herself. Thanks to Alice Kaplan, one of our most perceptive chroniclers of French culture, we can now see the woman behind the myth, precisely because Kaplan respects the multiplicity—and the mysteries—of her elusive subject, whose paintings have been variously praised as a modernist and 'primitive,' surrealist and traditionalist. Seeing Baya is a study not only of her radiant art, but of the twilight of Algérie française, written with the qualities we've come to expect from Kaplan: sophistication, delicacy, and a deeply affecting humanism.""   -- Adam Shatz, author of ""The Rebel's Clinic: The Revolutionary Lives of Frantz Fanon"" ""Alice Kaplan has brilliantly understood Baya, Algeria’s mid-twentieth century child-genius painter. An ordinary art history would be insufficient, because Baya is not just about the powerfully designed paintings she made, but also about the many stories that have been told around her, some of them colonialist, sexist, or condescendingly adult. Kaplan weaves these existing accounts into one tale with consummate empathy and skill. She constantly acknowledges the biases of her sources, yet in so doing manages to create one narrative which is truer than any of its parts. Behind Kaplan’s fluid, concise, engrossing, perfectly paced biography hover the most subtle, sophisticated academic theories about colonial history, racialized identities, and gender.  This is critical fabulation at its literary best: a reconstruction of the past which counteracts history’s erasures with both archival accuracy and personal imagination. The beauty of Kaplan's prose is itself the highest possible tribute to Baya's art.""   -- Anne Higonnet, author of Liberty Equality Fashion: The Women Who Styled the French Revolution “In this riveting account of the teenage Algerian girl who took the postwar Paris art world by storm, Alice Kaplan illuminates the complex tangle of characters and motivations that created a phenomenon. Richly insightful, powerfully relevant, Kaplan’s Seeing Baya unsettles and exhilarates in equal measure.”   -- Claire Messud, author of This Strange Eventful History"


"""In the story of Baya Mahieddine, Alice Kaplan sees into the difficulty of seeing across cultures and across time. How did Baya, celebrated as a child genius in Paris in 1947, see the French people who took her up? How did they see her? Kaplan reads into Baya’s gloriously colorful art a record of intimate life as well as the fury and complexity of the Algerian War for Independence. A delicate and intensely moving tale, and a tribute to a powerful artist.""   -- Rosanna Warren, author of Max Jacob: A Life in Art and Letters ""Part biography, part microhistory, and part reverie, Alice Kaplan’s Seeing Baya reveals a whole world in the story of one forgotten woman. By turning the lens on Baya Mahieddine, a talented Algerian painter of humble origins who made her way into the salons of Paris and the pages of Vogue magazine, Kaplan shows that 'seeing Baya' is seeing the true power of art—its pleasure and its promise. Against the backdrop of France’s brutal colonial assault on Algeria, Kaplan recreates in painstaking detail the life and times of an artist finding her own voice, and her own life, despite the odds. An accomplished historian, Kaplan brings to this book her signature rigorous research and beautiful pen. The result, much like Baya’s canvases, is an utter delight.""    -- James McAuley, author of The House of Fragile Things"


Author Information

Alice Kaplan is the Sterling Professor of French at Yale University. She is coauthor of States of Plague, with Laura Marris, and author of French Lessons, The Collaborator, Looking for “The Stranger,” and Dreaming in French, all also published by the University of Chicago Press. She has been a finalist for both the National Book Critics Circle Award and the National Book Award. She lives in Guilford, Connecticut.  

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