Xavier Valls

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Xavier Valls Subirà (1923–2006) was a Spanish painter who lived in Paris most of his life. He specialised in still lifes. His work can be found in museums in Spain. He was the father of French Prime Minister Manuel Valls.

Early life

Xavier Valls was born on 18 September 1923 in Barcelona, Spain.[1][2] His father, Magí Valls, served on the editorial board of El Matí, a Catholic Catalan newspaper.[1]

He learned the visual arts from the Swiss sculptor Charles Collet and the Spanish painter Jaume Busquets in the 1930s.[2][3]

Career

Valls started his career as a designer for Ramon Sunyer, a jeweller.[2] He then worked for architects Lluís Bonet Garí, Isidre Puig Boada and Francesc Folguera i Grassi as well as designer Santiago Marco.[2]

In 1946, he was a co-founder of the Cercle Maillol at the French Institute of Barcelona with Charles Collet, Suzanne Alemany, Alfred Figueras and Bernard Sanjuan.[1][2]

He moved to Paris in 1949 thanks to a scholarship from the French Institute of Barcelona, and decided to stay.[1][2] By 1953, his paintings were exhibited at the Salon d'Automne.[2] Meanwhile, he worked with Fernand Léger on stained glass designs.[2] His work was exhibited in the art galleries of art dealers Henriette Gomès and Claude Bernard.[1]

He was the recipient of the Prix Drouant in 1980.[2] A year later, in 1981, the Musée Ingres in Montauban organised an exhibition solely about his work.[1] Three years later, in 1984, the Museo de Arte Moderno in Madrid added his 1974 painting, Pêches et pichet to their collection.[2] He became an Officer of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 1989.[2]

He published by memoir, La capsa meva Pandora in Catalan in 2003.[1]

Personal life

He married Luisangela Galfetti in 1958.[4] Four years later, in 1962, they had two children: a son, Manuel Valls, who has served as the Prime Minister of France since 2014,[4]Although they lived in Paris, they summered in Barcelona every year.[1]

Death

He died of colon cancer in Barcelona in 2006.[1] He was only diagnosed one month before his death.[1] He was eighty-two years old.