Balthus' older brother, Pierre Klossowski, was a philosopher influenced by Marquis de Sade writings. Jean Cocteau, who was friend of the Klossowskis, found some inspiration for his novel Les Enfants Terribles (1929) on his visits to the family.
As he matured in the early 1930s, Balthus' paintings often depicted pubescent young girls in erotic and voyeuristic poses. His most notorious work was The Guitar Lesson (1934), which caused controversy in Paris due to its depiction of a sexually explicit lesbian scene featuring a young girl and her teacher.
In 1937 he married Antoinette de Watteville, whom he met as early as in 1924. She was the model for a series of portraits.
Early on his work was admired by writers and fellow painters, especially by André Breton and Pablo Picasso. His circle of friends in Paris included the novelist Pierre-Jean Jouve, the photographers Josef Breitenbach and Man Ray, Antonin Artaud, and the painters Andre Derain, Joan Miro and Alberto Giacometti (one of the most faithful of his friends). In 1948, another friend, Albert Camus, asked him to design the sets and costumes for his play L'Etat de Siège (The State of Siege, directed by Jean-Louis Barrault).
Balthus spent most of his life in France, and as international fame grew he cultivated himself and his past as an enigma. In 1953 he moved into the Château de Chassy, were he finished his masterpieces "The Room" (1952, influenced by Pierre Klossowski's novels) and "The Street"(1954). In 1964 he moved to Rome, where he presided over Villa de Medici director of the Academy of France in Rome, and made friends with the filmmaker Frederico Fellini and the painter Renato Guttuso.
In 1977 he moved to Rossinière, Switzerland. That he had a second, Japanese wife Setsuko thirty-five years his junior simply added to the air of mystery around him (he met her in Japan, during a diplomatic mission initiated by André Malraux). The photographers and friends Henri Cartier-Bresson and Martine Franck (Cartier-Bresson's wife), both portrayed the painter and his wife and their daughter Harumi in his Grand Chalet in Rossinière in 1999.
Balthus was the only living artist who had his artwork in the Louvre's collection (it came from Picasso's private collection when it was donated to that museum).
Prime Ministers and rock stars alike attended the funeral of Balthus. Bono, lead-singer of U2, sang for the hundreds of mourners at the funeral. Biographers rushed into print shortly after his death, and their work has since been severely and widely criticized as being unreasonable and confused.
The work of Balthus shows numerous influences, including Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, Poussin, Jean-Étienne Liotard, Joseph Reinhardt, Géricault, Goya and Courbet. His favorite composer was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (he designed the stage for one of the composer's operas, Cosi fan tutte, in Aix-en-Provence, together with Adolphe Mouron Cassandre).
His work influenced several artists, among them the filmmaker Jacques Rivette of the French New Wave. His film Hurlevent (1985) was inspired by Balthus' Drawings made at the beginning of the thirties. As his says in an interview with Valerie Hazette: "Seeing as he's a bit of an eccentric and all that, I am very fond of Balthus (...) I was struck by the fact that Balthus enormously simplified the costumes and stripped away the imagery trappings (...)".
Another artist influenced by Balthus is the photographer Duane Michals.
The novel Hannibal by Thomas Harris refers to the fictional Hannibal Lecter as a cousin of Balthus.
From Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balthus
Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License
| Friend of Pablo Ruiz Blasco y Picasso (Picasso), André Breton, Emmanuel Radnitsky (Man Ray) and Alberto Giacometti
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