Annelies Nelck


Annelies "Anatole" Nelck was a French painter and engraver, of Dutch ancestry. She was known for her paintings of landscapes of the South of France, and still-lifes. Nelck had served in the 1940s as Henri Matisse's assistant, and as a model for his works.

Early life and education

Annelies Nelck was born on 26 July 1925, in Nice, France, to Dutch parents from Holland. She was raised in the small town of Vence in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in Southeastern France. She later gave herself the artist name "Anatole".
In 1938, Nelck moved to studied at Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten in Amsterdam.
While living in Amsterdam, Annelies married Jewish music student Ernst Katan in 1943, and together they had one son, Serge Katan. Katan was part of the Dutch resistance, and tried to join Nelck in France but was intercepted and sent to Kamp Amersfoort in 1943. He was murdered by the German Nazis on September 1944.

Career

Nelck and her son returned to France in 1943, and she started working for Henri Matisse as his assistant and model. She was the model for Matisse's paintings and drawings, including Tulipes jaunes, fond de violet, Annelies, tulipes et anémones, and . She continued to work for Matisse until 1946.
From 1947 to 1967, Nelck was married to the sculptor and painter Jean Vincent de Crozals, ending in divorce. De Crozal also worked as a model for Matisse.
Nelck belonged to the circle of the "Galerie Les Mages" founded by Alphonse Chave in Vence, and associated with artists such as Jean Dubuffet, Henri Laurens, Marc Chagall, and Pierre Bonnard. In 1950 she was invited to take part in Les Mains Éblouies exhibition at the Galerie Maeght in Paris.
In 1954, she designed a stained glass window x for the Anne Frank Secondary School in Düsseldorf, Germany which was restored in 2012.

Late life, death, and legacy

In 2011 she moved to Nexon, France where she remained for the last three years of her life. She died on the 22 August 2014 in Nexon.
Her work can be found in museum collections, including at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, Russia; and at the Musée de l'Art Brut in Lausanne, Switzerland.