Ariane Laroux


Ariane Laroux is a Franco-Swiss painter, draughtsman and printmaker. She is known for her black and white drawings, using void and empty spaces in her artworks. She has drawn portraits of renowned activists, while interviewing them, paying attention to having exactly the same number of women and men portraits in her books. She has exhibited several examples in the British Museum.

Biography

Laroux was born in Paris, France, and spent her childhood with her parents in Montmartre in the studio of the Red House of Artists, Rue Ordener, and with her grandparents at Square de la Tour Maubourg near Les Invalides.
After studying at the College of Verneuil-sur-Seine, she gained a degree in History at the Sorbonne and at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Geneva. In 1984 she married the artist-engraver Daniel Divorne, director of the Geneva Centre for Contemporary Engraving.

Exhibitions

From 1979 to 2017, Laroux exhibited at, among others, the Alice Pauli Gallery in Lausanne, the Cantonal Museum of Fine Arts in Lausanne, Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart, in Ditesheim, the gallery Eric Franck, the Michel Foëx Gallery, Museum Country and Val de Charmey, the Museum of the Resistance in Lyon, the Roswitha Hartmann Gallery, the Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations, the Musée de l'Homme, the British Museum.