Dutch painter Jacqueline de Jong, celebrated for her contributions to painterly figuration and for her position in Europe’s avant-garde Situationist motion, died on Saturday, June 29 in Amsterdam on the age of 85. The trigger was metastatic liver most cancers, as confirmed by Ortuzar Tasks, the gallery representing the artist in New York Metropolis.
De Jong was born in 1939 to a Jewish art-aligned household within the Dutch city of Hengelo months earlier than the onset of World Struggle II. Fearing the implications of the German invasion within the Netherlands, the de Jongs went into hiding, and Jacqueline and her mom quickly fled to Zurich, the place they have been quickly separated attributable to lack of lodging. Upon her return to her native nation in 1946 after the battle, de Jong struggled to regulate as she re-learned the Dutch language. Her curiosity in artwork, notably efficiency, emerged as a displaced younger lady and was cemented in her teenage years.
On the age of 18, de Jong moved to Paris and labored for Christian Dior’s boutique whereas finding out French and theater. She relocated to London in 1958 to enroll in the Guildhall Faculty of Music and Drama however returned to the Netherlands shortly thereafter, working part-time on the Stedelijk Museum whereas pursuing portray on her personal time as a self-taught artist.
Whereas employed on the museum, the artist grew to become concerned in and shortly assumed a high-level position within the Dutch faction of the Situationist Worldwide, an anti-capitalist, avant-garde motion made up of artists, writers, and political theorists that was outstanding in Europe from 1957 till its dissolution in 1972. A battle with the group’s chief, Man Debord, led to de Jong’s formal exit from the motion, which in flip enabled her to create her personal topical publication referred to as the Situationist Occasions. De Jong edited, designed, and revealed six editions of the journal between 1962 and 1967 with numerous contributors, and in addition distributed revolutionary literature and printed posters in Paris in the course of the Could 1968 protests.
All through her journey with the Situationists, de Jong additionally maintained a dedication to her creative observe and included it into her activism. Amid the worldwide sweep of abstraction all through the Sixties, she grew extra fascinated with making figurative work, partaking in a gawky, naive, part-Expressionist and part-cartoonish model that stripped away any notions of pleasantries and politeness to reveal the uncooked wounds, absurdities, and eroticism of the human situation. Along with her mother and father’ assortment of recent artwork, she was deeply impressed by the likes of Max Beckmann, Rembrandt, Hercules Seghers, Nicolas de Staël, and the Dada motion.
Provocative, candid, political, and unmistakably feminist, de Jong’s radical artwork observe primarily gleaned appreciation within the Netherlands, with particular consideration afforded to her Unintentional Work and Suicidal Portray collection. Nonetheless, lately, admiration for the artist has expanded all through Europe and North America. In 2018, Les Abattoirs within the French metropolis of Toulouse hosted a main survey of her historic work from the Sixties, together with her Could ’68 posters, juxtaposed along with her latest items and associated ephemera.
A collection of de Jong’s newest works responding to the violence seen in Ukraine and Gaza as we speak, and because it roots to her childhood displacement in addition to her early-adulthood activism are on view in her solo exhibition, La Petite Mort at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery in London till July 13. Ortuzar Tasks additionally confirms that de Jong’s first survey in the US is slated for this 12 months on the Nova Southeastern College Artwork Museum in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.