Marie-Thérèse Marguerite Jeanne (Maïté) Duval (Maïté Rijkhart de Voogd-Duval, Renazé, 26 March 1944 – Zutphen, 2 November 2019) was a French-born Dutch sculptress and drafter.[1]
Maïté Duval
Born
(1944-03-26)March 26, 1944
Renazé, France
Died
November 2, 2019(2019-11-02) (aged75)
Zutphen, the Netherlands
Resting place
Zutphen, the Netherlands
Almamater
University of Rouen Normandy
Knownfor
bronze sculptures
Notable work
IJsberen (1986, Polar bears), Rust na arbeid (1987, Rest after work), Paula in kamerjas (1988, Paula in Dressing Gown), Ainsi Soit-elle (1992, Let her be this way)
Maïté Duval was born in Renazé (Mayenne, Pays de la Loire, France) and studied literature at the University of Rouen Normandy. As a sculptress, Duval was self-taught. In 1968 she moved to the Netherlands where she started her career as a sculptress in 1974. Her work was presented at many group and solo exhibitions, including at Museum Henriette Polak (Zutphen, 1978 and 1996), Singer Museum (Laren, North Holland, 1983), Galerie Mia Joosten (Amsterdam, 1998), Beeldentuin Interart (Heeswijk, 1993-1999) and Den Haag Sculptuur (The Hague, 2003).
Duval lived and worked in Zutphen, where she exhibited her works in her atelier and sculpture garden. She was married to the painter Thierry Rijkhart de Voogd (1944-1999), who was likewise of French birth.[2] Duval died at the age of 75[3] Her small sculpture titled "Ingekeerd" was placed on her grave at the Oosterbegraafplaats cemetery of Zutphen.
Statues by Duval in the public space
The dates given for each sculpture are the years of creation and subsequent copies at the original locations.
Bérendine (1976), municipal school in Voorst (1977), De Beukenhof in Loosdrecht (1987)
Torso cambré (1979, Arched torso), De Hanzehof, Zutphen (1996)
Rêverie (1980), town hall of Voorst in Twello (1982) and De Sokkerwei, Castricum (2003)
De Gans (1981, The Goose), town hall of Deventer (1982), Voorst (1987) and Kleidijk, Rhoon (2003)
Else (1982), 't Veld Paasberg, Terborg (1989) and Oude Bornhof, Zutphen (1990)
Bérendine (1984), Lochem (1987), De Scheg, Deventer
Bérendine (1985), town hall Zutphen, location Warnsveld
Zuster van het Gemeene Leven op het bleekveld (1985, Sister of the Common Life on the bleaching field), Agnietenhof, Zutphen. Also a preparatory study in Museum Catharijneconvent, Utrecht
Monument Stormramp of 1925 (1985, Tornado monument), Kerkplein, Borculo
IJsberen - small version (1986), Verpleeghuis Lückerheide, Kerkrade (1994) and 't Bouwhuis, Enschede (2004)
Rust na arbeid (1987, Rest after work), Dorpsplein, Klarenbeek
De Sprong (1987, The jump), Henriette Polaklaan, Zutphen (1996)
Paula in kamerjas (1988, Paula in Dressing Gown)[4] in the Sculpture Garden of Museum de Fundatie (Heino, Netherlands) and previously in the nursing home De Hoogweide, Lochem (1994), Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede (1998) and in Hoog Soeren (2010)
Melancholie (1991, Melancholia), Museum Henriette Polak, Zutphen. In 2009 relocated to the entrance hall of the Stedelijk Museum Zutphen
Draaiende vrouw (1991, Spinning woman), ING Bank, Zutphen (1997)
Ainsi Soit-elle (1992, Let her be this way), De Koppellaan, Beek en Donk (1994), Stationsstraat, Apeldoorn (1995) and Belvédère, Breda (2007)
Geste libre (1996, Free gesture), Frans Halslaan, Zutphen (2006)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maïté Duval.
References
"Maïté Duval". rkd.nl. RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
Jeurissen, Lian (2009). Het grootste in de kleinste dingen. Thierry Rijkhart de Voogd, 1944-1999 (in Dutch). Zutphen: Stedelijke Musea Zutphen. ISBN978-90-805756-4-6.
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