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Annie Caroline Pontifex Fernhout-Toorop (24 March 18915 November 1955), known as Charley Toorop (), was a and lithographer.


Life
Charley Toorop was born in . She was the daughter of and Annie Hall. She married the philosopher in May 1912, but they divorced in 1917. Her son (1912–1974) also became a painter. Her other son, (1913–1987), became a filmmaker, and often worked together with . As a filmmake, he sometimes used the name John Ferno. Charley's daughter in law was the well-known Jewish photographer Eva Besnyö (1910–2003), who married John in 1933.

In the online biography of the Dutch poet from the Charley Toorop is mentioned as one of the women who had a relationship with Marsman before he married in 1929 his wife Rien Barendregt.


Work
Charley Toorop became a member of the group of artists called Het Signaal (The Signal) in 1916. The group aimed to depict a deep sense of reality through the use of colours and heavily accentuated lines and through fierce contrasts of colours. This is one of the reasons why Toorop is seen as adherent to the .

Toorop befriended other artists, among them Bart van der Leck and . In 1926 Charley Toorop went to live for two years in , where her painting became influenced by film. She frontally depicted figures standing isolated from each other, as if they were lit by lamps at a movie set. Her show kinship to the synthetic of . From the 1930s onwards, she painted many female figures, as well as nudes and self-portraits in a powerful, realistic style. Well-known is her large painting Three Generations ( Drie generaties) (1941–1950; in the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, ), which is a self-portrait, a portrait of her father and of her son Edgar, in which she unites both realism and a sense of symbolism.

Her ruthless realism has a magic touch. "Is the natural appearance reality," she wondered in 1917, "or can we sense in its form only the most unreal that appears before us? This unreal, which is the most real."

Toorop had lived at many different places, but from 1932 on she resided in Bergen, North Holland, a town she'd previously had her home between 1912-1915 and 1922–1926. There she designed and commissioned a house called "De Vlerken", situated at the Buerweg 19. The house is still there, although after a fire its thatched roof has been replaced by a tiled roof. Charley Toorop died in Bergen on November 5, 1955. Her works are in many public collections, notably in the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo.

One of her paintings featured in the exhibition called "How Van Gogh Came to Groningen," which opened at the in November 2024, and which considered the circles of artists, art fans, and collectors who generated early Dutch interest in the works of Vincent Van Gogh.


Literature
  • Rembert, Virginia Pitts (2005) "Charley Toorop" in: Woman's Art Journal, 26, no. 2, (2005): 26–32.
  • Bremer, Jaap B.J. (1995) "Charley Toorop : works in the Kröller-Müller Museum collection", Otterlo : Kröller-Müller Museum. , .


Exhibitions (selection)
  • 19 February – 9 May 2010: 'Charley Toorop', Musée d'Art Moderne de la ville de Paris, Paris, France
  • 11 November 2008 – 5 April 2009: "Werken op papier" - Charley Toorop (1891–1955) (prints), Museum Kranenburgh, Bergen, North Holland
  • 27 September 2008 – 1 February 2009: the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in showed her work in the exhibition "Vooral geen principes!"
  • 4 September 2004 – 13 March 2005: an exhibition of her work was held at the in Groningen
  • 12 January 1982 – 12 April 1982: retrospective exhibition of Charley Toorop in in Utrecht


Public collections


Notes and references

External links

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