Françoise Sullivan

Sans titre

Painted steel
1967
92 x 102 x 20 cm (36,25 x 40 x 8 po)
Price available on request

About the artist

Françoise Sullivan

Françoise Sullivan

Françoise Sullivan was born in Montréal, where she initially studied at the city’s École des beaux-arts. While this uniquely multifaceted artist was first renowned as a dancer and choreographer, it has been her work as a painter, sculptor and photographer that has truly stood out in her long career. Along with Paul-Émile Borduas, she was one of the founding members of the avant-garde Automatiste movement, and one of the signatories of that group’s 1948 manifesto, the Refus global. Moreover, in that revolutionary document Borduas included the entire text of Ms. Sullivan’s celebrated lecture on La danse et l'espoir.Since then, her work has been shown at countless different solo and group exhibitions, including retrospectives at the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec (1993) and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (2003). Another major exhibition will be dedicated to her at the MMFA in the fall of 2023, on the occasion of her centennial anniversary.

She received the Paul-Émile Borduas Award in 1987 and holds honorary degrees from UQAM and Toronto’s York University. A teacher at Concordia University for over 30 years, Françoise Sullivan was also a board member of the Montreal Arts Council, a jury member and lecturer.

The gallery represents her since 2005.

Complete biography — Canada Art Institute