- Marcelle Ferron
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Marcelle Ferron Born January 29, 1924
Louiseville (Mauricie), QuebecDied November 19, 2001 (aged 77)
Montreal, QuebecNationality Canadian Field stained glass artist Marcelle Ferron, GOQ (January 29, 1924 – November 19, 2001), a Québécoise painter and stained glass artist, was a major figure in the Quebec contemporary art scene.
Jacques Ferron, a Québécois writer, is her elder brother, while Madeleine Ferron, also a writer, is their sister.
Born in Louiseville (Mauricie), Quebec, she was an early member of Paul-Émile Borduas's Automatistes art movement. She signed the manifesto Refus global, a watershed event in the Quebec cultural scene, in 1948.
In 1953, she moved to Paris, where she worked for 13 years in drawing and painting and was introduced to the art of stained glass, for which she would become best known.
One of her stained-glass windows is at Champ-de-Mars metro station in Montreal. It was one of the first non-figurative works to be installed in the metro, in defiance of the didactic style present in other works of the period, and signalled a major shift in public art in Montreal between the policies of then art director Robert Lapalme and future art director and fellow automatiste Jean-Paul Mousseau. Other examples of her works can be seen at Vendôme metro station, Hôpital Sainte-Justine, and the ICAO headquarters, in Montreal; the Place du Portage in Gatineau, Quebec; and the Granby, Quebec courthouse.
In 1983, she was awarded the Paul-Émile-Borduas medal for the visual arts by the government of Quebec.[1] In 1985, she was made a Knight of the National Order of Quebec and was promoted to Grand Officer in 2000.
She died in Montreal.
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External links
Categories:- Canadian painters
- Canadian stained glass artists and manufacturers
- Montreal Metro artists
- Grand Officers of the National Order of Quebec
- French Quebecers
- 1924 births
- 2001 deaths
- Canadian women artists
- Women painters
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