Violette Mège
Violette Clarisse Mège was an Algerian-born French artist, and teacher and wife of artist Michael Baxte.
Early life
Mège was born to European parents Gaston Mège and Emma Barry, in Chabet el Ameur, Algeria. In 1914, Mège was the first woman to win a major Beaux Arts competition in Algeria, and won a scholarship to study art in France.Career
In Paris, Mège exhibited her art in 1916 and won another scholarship; with the money, she moved to New York with her sister, Emma. She exhibited her colorful still life paintings, street scenes, and portraits in New York beginning in 1917. "Miss Mege wastes no paint in telling her story," commented a New York reviewer in 1918. "There is an absence of detail often, but that only makes the work larger in effect." She was part of group shows at the Macdowell Club in 1918, and at the Waldorf in 1919 with the Society of Independent Artists.In the early 1920s, Mège was a member of the board of directors of Salons of America, an exhibition organization for contemporary American artists. She had a solo show in 1930 at Alma Reed's Delphic Studios in New York, before she moved to France with her husband. They moved again, to Mexico City, in 1941, to escape wartime Europe. By 1942, she was exhibiting her work in Mexico City. She taught her husband to paint, and he became a notable artist.