Hélène de Beauvoir
French painter
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Hélène de Beauvoir | |
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Born | Henriette-Hélène de Beauvoir 6 June 1910 Paris, France |
Died | 1 July 2001(2001-07-01) (aged 91) Goxwiller, France |
Occupation | Painter |
Spouse | Lionel de Roulet |
Relatives | Simone de Beauvoir (sister) |
Henriette-Hélène de Beauvoir (6 June 1910 – 1 July 2001) was a French painter. She was the younger sister of philosopher Simone de Beauvoir. Her art was exhibited in Europe, Japan, and the US.[1] She married Lionel de Roulet.[2]
When Hélène de Beauvoir lived in Goxwiller, a village near Strasbourg, she became president of the center for battered women. She continued painting until she was 85. Many of her paintings were related to feminist philosophy and women's issues.[3]
References
Sources
- Monteil Claudine, Les Sœurs Beauvoir, Editions no 1, Paris, 2003.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hélène de Beauvoir.
- Hélène de Beauvoir site, archived at the Wayback Machine
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Simone de Beauvoir
- When Things of the Spirit Come First (1937)
- She Came to Stay (1943)
- The Blood of Others (1945)
- All Men Are Mortal (1946)
- The Mandarins (1954)
- Pyrrhus and Cineas (1944)
- The Ethics of Ambiguity (1946)
- America Day by Day (1948)
- The Second Sex (1949)
- The Coming of Age (1970)
- Hélène de Beauvoir (sister)
- Sylvie Le Bon-de Beauvoir (adopted daughter)
- Jean-Paul Sartre
- Place Jean-Paul-Sartre-et-Simone-de-Beauvoir
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