Sonia Delaunay (November 14, 1885 – December 5, 1979)
Get a Delaunay Certificate of Authenticity for your painting (COA) for your Delaunay drawing.
For all your Delaunay artworks you need a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) in order to sell, to insure or to donate for a tax deduction.
Getting a Delaunay Certificate of Authenticity (COA) is easy. Just send us photos and dimensions and tell us what you know about the origin or history of your Delaunay painting or drawing.
If you want to sell your Delaunay painting or drawing use our selling services. We offer Delaunay selling help, selling advice, private treaty sales and full brokerage.
We have been authenticating Delaunay and issuing certificates of authenticity since 2002. We are recognized Delaunay experts and Delaunay certified appraisers. We issue COAs and appraisals for all Delaunay artworks.
Our Delaunay paintings and drawings authentications are accepted and respected worldwide.
Each COA is backed by in-depth research and analysis authentication reports.
The Delaunay certificates of authenticity we issue are based on solid, reliable and fully referenced art investigations, authentication research, analytical work and forensic studies.
We are available to examine your Delaunay painting or drawing anywhere in the world.
You will generally receive your certificates of authenticity and authentication report within two weeks. Some complicated cases with difficult to research Delaunay paintings or drawings take longer.
Our clients include Delaunay collectors, investors, tax authorities, insurance adjusters, appraisers, valuers, auctioneers, Federal agencies and many law firms.
We perform Sonia Delaunay art authentication, appraisal, certificates of authenticity (COA), analysis, research, scientific tests, full art authentications. We will help you sell your Sonia Delaunay or we will sell it for you.
The work of Sonia Delaunay may be hard for some authenticators to distinguish. In many cases, her style was very similar to that of her husband, fellow painter Robert Delaunay. The two, in fact, worked side by side, so naturally that their styles complemented one another. In some cases it is nearly impossible to tell which Delaunay created which painting but a trained and educated eye can pick out the work from either husband or wife.
Sonia Delaunay was born in the Ukraine, and raised by her uncle, whose family was eventually able to formally adopt her. Delaunay traveled often as a child, and was enrolled in art school in St. Petersburg at the age of 16. She was eventually sent to Germany to continue her art studies at the Karlsruhe Academy of Fine Arts.
Delaunay finally moved to Paris in 1905 to pursue her art career. Though she was married to a German art dealer at the time she met Robert Delaunay, the two began a relationship and were married in 1910. Together they created Orphism, a whole new arena of Abstract and Cubist art that infused color, motion and geometry.
While her husband remained focused on his painting, Sonia delved into the world of fashion and textiles during the First World War. Her take on high fashion included lyrical pieces that were full of movement—an inspiration from her themes as a painter. Many of Sonia’s compositions mirrored contemporary fashion patterns of today and were always bright, colorful and geometric.
By the 1930s, Sonia returned to painting, which she would continue even after her husbands death in 1941, though she produced little work from then until 1950. Even after she began to work again, her later paintings gained little interest, though this was a very prolific period for her. In 1968 she donated a number of her husbands and her own works to the National Art Museum in Paris, perhaps in hope of regaining notoriety.
Even though Sonia Delaunay may have been seen by some as following in her husbands footsteps, she made great strides on her own as an artist. In fact, Sonia was the first woman to ever have her work exhibited in the Louvre during her lifetime, a great honor for any artist. During her lifetime, she often was invited to lecture at universities like the Sorbonne, and is even credited as being one of the first to suggest “ready to wear” clothing.
Because Sonia led a very long, very bohemian lifestyle, the possibility of owning one of her pieces is great, as is the possibility of her work being wrongly authenticated. Today her work is housed all over France and she is remembered as a forerunner in abstract art and as an inspiration to generations of female artists.
If you suspect you may own a Delaunay, please contact us.
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