Jeanne Selmersheim-Desgrange


Jeanne Selmersheim-Desgrange was a French neo-impressionist painter who used the art technique of pointillism with her main themes of flowers and gardens. Her painting, Garden at La Lune, Saint-Tropez, shows her signature use of “high-key colors and block-like strokes.”
Some of her oil on canvas works are
Garden at La Hune, Saint Tropez,
The Flowers,
In the Garden,
Table blanche, vue sur Saint-Tropez,
The Garden,
Afternoon Tea,
Flowers in the Window, and
Bouquet of Flowers.
Selmersheim-Desgrange, raised in a family of artists and architects, became an art student of Paul Signac and later, in 1910, his companion. At the time, Signac was married to Bertha, and Selmersheim-Desgrange was married to Pierre Desgrange with whom she had three children. In September 1912, Signac and Selmersheim-Desgrange moved to a rented villa in Cap d’Antibes, France and in October 1912 she gave birth to their daughter Ginnette Laurie Anaiis.
In July 1961, Selmersheim-Desgrange’s painting, The Flowers, was one of 57 modern art paintings stolen from the Annonciade Museum of Modern Art in Saint-Tropez, France.