Jeanne Reynal
Jeanne Reynal was a mosaicist and a significant figure of the New [York School (art)|New York School] group of artists. She showed with Betty Parsons Gallery. Her work is in the collections of Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, San Francisco [Museum of Modern Art], Denver Art Museum, Ford Foundation, New York University, Phillips Academy, and Los Angeles [County Museum of Art]. Her personal papers from 1942 to 1968 are included in the Archives of American Art.
Early life
Reynal was born in 1903 in White Plains, New York. She was the second of five children. When Reynal was nine years old, her parents separated. She moved to Millbrook, New York with her father where she was taught by a governess. Her other siblings continued to live with her mother.Early career
At the age of twenty-four, Reynal spent a summer to England, France, and Italy with her siblings and her mother. It was during this trip that Reynal first met the Russian mosaicist Boris Anrep. Two years later, Reynal began an apprenticeship with Anrep in Europe after assisting him with a mosaic he installed in the Bank of England. The two also became romantically involved until Anrep left Reynal for a wealthy Englishwoman.Reynal left Paris in 1937 and moved to California, where she worked in a potting shed in Marin County. She then moved to the High Sierras, where she built a house and studio.
After living in California for eight years, Reynal returned to her Greenwich Village, New York studio in 1946. At that time, she further developed friendships with artists including Willem and Elaine de Kooning.
She married the painter Thomas Sills in 1955. They traveled together across Russia, Turkey, Greece, and Italy in 1959 to further study the art of mosaic.