Tamara de Lempicka's 120th birthday is celebrated by today's Google Doodle with a design inspired by the highly stylised Art Deco work of the artist herself.
Born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1898, Lempicka developed her artistic side on a trip to Italy in 1911, which she took while boarded at a school in Switzerland. The next year her parents divorced and she was sent to St. Petersburg to live with her aunt.
Related: Who was Hannah Glasse? Google Doodle celebrates the author of the first modern cookbook
In Russia she met her first husband. Along with other members of her family they escaped the revolution by fleeing to Paris. It was there that her artistic life began to flourish, under expert tutelage she developed her notable style and began exhibiting and taking commissions.
Along with her colorful depictions of the roaring twenties, Lempicka was a notorious socialite and later took to painting portraits of the wealthy elite in Paris and then America, where she settled with her second husband after escaping war in Europe.
In Los Angeles, New York City and Houston, Lempicka continued her stylistic painting, later turning to more abstract themes as her milieu grew. She moved to Mexico in the 1970s where, after a period of declining health, she died in 1980 during her sleep.
"Few artists embodied the exuberant roaring twenties more than Polish artist Tamara de Lempicka," Google Doodle artist Matthew Cruickshank said. "Her fast-paced, opulent lifestyle manifests itself perfectly into the stylized Art Deco subjects she celebrated in her paintings."
"I first encountered Lempicka's work at her Royal Academy show in London, 2004. I was struck by the scale and skill of her paintings coupled with her life (as colorful as her work!). I chose to place a portrait of Lempicka in my design with accompanying motifs evocative of the roaring '20s and '30s. It's no easy feat to recreate any artists work - but I hope to have done so here."
Known as 'The Baroness with a Brush' after marrying her second husband, Baron Raoul Kuffner, Lempicka famously said: "I live life in the margins of society, and the rules of normal society don't apply to those who live on the fringe."
Of her own work, she said: "Among a hundred paintings, you could recognize mine, my goal was: Do not copy. Create a new style, ...colors light and bright, return to elegance in my models."
"I have painted kings and prostitutes," she noted another time, "I don't paint people because they are famous. I paint those who inspire me and make me vibrate."
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
");jQuery(this).remove()}) jQuery('.start-slider').owlCarousel({loop:!1,margin:10,nav:!0,items:1}).on('changed.owl.carousel',function(event){var currentItem=event.item.index;var totalItems=event.item.count;if(currentItem===0){jQuery('.owl-prev').addClass('disabled')}else{jQuery('.owl-prev').removeClass('disabled')} if(currentItem===totalItems-1){jQuery('.owl-next').addClass('disabled')}else{jQuery('.owl-next').removeClass('disabled')}})}})})ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7r7HWrK6enZtjsLC5jq2YppmilnqlsYylnKaomZi4onnQrqatnaNis6Kv02aZmqqfo7K0v4ybqa6rmGKGc4SRa2w%3D