Offered by Le Chef d'oeuvre inconnu
Late 19th early 20th century painting
An oil on canvas measuring 61 x 50 cm depicting the city of Fez in Morocco, signed and dated in the lower right corner, circa 1925, a work by Suzanne Drouet-Réveillaud (1885-1970).
The granddaughter of the sculptor Charles Cordier, she was among the first women admitted to the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
She studied under the direction of Ferdinand Humbert and her fellow students included Marcelle Ackein and Aline de Lens. She won prizes from the Société Coloniale des Artistes Français, which awarded her a scholarship to Tunisia in 1919 and then to Morocco in 1923. She married André Réveillaud, a civil administrator in Meknes and later a lawyer in Fez and a writer.
She lived in Morocco until 1950, residing in the medina of Fez. It was in this country that she created the majority of her work. She participated in several exhibitions at the Derche Gallery in Casablanca with the painters Marcel Vicaire and Jean Baldoui from 1929 to 1931, and her work was praised by critics of the time. In 1954, she won a prize that allowed her to travel to Cameroon. At 69 years old, she traveled throughout the country, bringing back canvases depicting remote villages and portraits of women from different tribes. Untiring, she then embarked in 1960 on a cargo ship voyage that took her to China and Japan, and then another trip to Mexico in 1963, this time by plane, bringing back new canvases from these countries, all demonstrating her great mastery of the use of color.