Hermine David


Hermine Lionette Cartan David was a French painter.

Early life and education

Hermine David was born in Paris in 1886. She was born out of wedlock; her mother insisted that her biological father was a Habsburg archduke.

Career

She became one of the Ecole de Paris artists, a group of mostly non-French artists, émigrés particularly from eastern Europe who were working in Paris before World War I. Jules Pascin was another member of that artistic group, whom she met in 1907. By that time, she was already well-established as a successful young painter, miniaturist and printmaker. She followed Pascin to the United States in 1915, where they were married on September 25, 1918. They stayed a total of five years, past the end of World War I. David exhibited in New York City during her residence there.
In 1920, after they returned to France, she exhibited in London and in several solo shows at prominent Paris galleries.
While her finest work dates to the 1920s and '30s, including the book illustrations for which she developed a passion in the '20s, she was active into the 1960s. She won a watercolor prize at the Biennale de Deauville in 1965.
She outlived her husband by forty years after he committed suicide in 1930. She died in 1970 at Bry-sur-Marne.
Her work is included in the collection of the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.