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Suzanne Balkanyi
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・ Suzanne Beauchamp-Niquet
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・ Suzanne Bennett Johnson
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・ Suzanne Bernert
・ Suzanne Bertish


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Suzanne Balkanyi : ウィキペディア英語版
Suzanne Balkanyi

Suzanne Balkanyi (14 March 1922 – 7 April 2005) was a French-Hungarian artist born in Budapest, Hungary known particularly for her humorous etchings of Paris street scenes. After narrowly escaping transportation to Auschwitz in 1944, she left Hungary in 1947 to live in Paris, where she worked until her death.
== Career ==

One of four daughters of a liberal intellectual Hungarian family, Suzanne Balkanyi studied at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts Paris. The earliest known reference to Balkanyi as an artist, refers to her exhibiting at the Jewish Students Union in Paris in December 1948.〔Droit et Liberté n°00018 - 15 December 1948, Page 9 ''Jeunes Artistes'' in "Spectacles, Arts, Lettres"〕 While working as an illustrator in the Ménagerie du Jardin des Plantes in Paris, she continued to develop her own work, commenting wryly on Paris life in drawing, etchings, woodblocks and other print techniques.
In the 1950s, she began to travel to Provence, and the little seaports of Brittany and Normandy. Later travels took her to Italy (Perugia, Venice and Sienna), the Netherlands, Spain (Toledo), Israel, Morocco and Senegal.
At her first one-woman show in 1966, she was recognised as "a printmaker of real and considerable quality" by the French artist Dunoyer de Segonzac〔Preface to "Suzanne Balkanyi" , Galerie "Le Nouvel Essor", Paris 1966〕 ("Son sens du ridicule ... révèle une sensibilité et une humanité très originale et sa technique d’aquafortiste d’une rare spontanéité qui touche à la naïveté, d’une réele et très grande qualité").
By the time of her death, she had had some eight solo exhibitions in Paris,〔Suzanne Balkanyi (1922-2005) in "La Fondation Taylor présente la 48me exposition de Pointe et Burin" published by Fondation Taylor, Paris 2006〕 was a founder-member of the Society of Engravers known as Pointe et Burin Paris and had showed regularly at the (Fondation Taylor ). In London her work has been shown posthumously at the Abbott and Holder Gallery.
Public collections holding her work include those of the City of Paris (''Un arrêt d’autobus''), the Musée du Louvre Print Collection (''Deux vieilles femmes '', ''Lourmarin'', ''Salon de couture'', ''Vue de Lourmarin''
), the Zurich Kunsthaus, the Musée de Beaux-Arts de Belfort, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and The British Museum (''La Rotisserie'').
Her images have been published in: ''Acceuil de Paris'', ''Le Trait'', ''La Pointe et Burin'' and ''La Gravure Originale''. Balkanyi illustrated a number of books including Francis Ambiére’s ''Le Bon Marché '' and Brussac Philippe and Pierre Mac Orlan’s ''La Légion Étrangère '' .

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