Marcelle Gabrielle Baud (28 November 1890 - 13 February 1987) was a French Egyptologist and artist.[1]
Early life
Marcelle Gabrielle Baud was born in the XI arrondissement of Paris on 28 November 1890 to Antoine Baud (artist) and Marthe Julie Adèle Morel, who was the daughter of Charles Numa Morel (artist).[1][2][3] She began drawing with her grandfather at age 9 and, from age 10, began assisting her father.[2][4]
Education
She attended Académie Julian and at 18, she entered the Beaux-Arts.[1][4][5] In 1911, she started her three years of studying Egyptology at the École du Louvre, during which time she wrote her thesis, entitled Les Dessins ébauchés de la Nécropole Thébaine (au Temps du Nouvel Empire).[2] She studied alongside Étienne Drioton, and it is likely the place where she met and became friends with Marcelle Werbrouck.[2][5]
During her studies at École du Louvre, she studied with Georges Bénédite, a Hellenist, and noticed that the poor quality of his documentation of images and began to draw for him.[2] In 1920, Benedite found her a place at the Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale (IFAO), where she was the first woman to be an attaché.[2]
Her illustrations from Theban Tombs was exhibited in the Louvre for a month.[3] In 1926–1927, she was asked by Capart, then curator in Royal Museums of Art and History in Brussels, to reproduce paintings from the Tomb of Nakht in the style of Robert Hays.[5][6][7] Capart recommended Baud to produce illustrations for the Brooklyn Museum.[3][5]
Her book, Les dessins ébauches de la necropole thebaine, which was published in 1935, remains a key volume studying the techniques of drawing in ancient Egypt.[2] Just prior to the Second World War starting she was invited to rewrite Hachette's Guide Bleu Egypte and completely rewrote it by 1956.[4] In 1956, she also returned to Egypt with Werbrouck, which would be Werbrouck's last time.[2]
Involvement with the Soroptimist movement
During the 1930s, she became a founding member of the club for Soroptimists in Paris, and she encouraged Werbrouck to set up the branch in Brussels.[2][8] After the war, Ripa de Roveredo asked for her help in the development of Soroptimists clubs in France.[2][3][9] Baud set up clubs across Auvergne, starting with two in Clermont-Ferrand (1954) and Issoire (1955).[3]
Publications
Baud wrote and illustrated several volumes:
Illustrated
Werbrouck, M. (1938). Les Pleureuses dans l'Egypte ancienne.
^ abcdefVaissiere, Odile (1990). "Marcelle BAUD"(PDF). issoire.soroptimist.fr (in French). Archived from the original(PDF) on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
^Van Rinsveld, Bernard (2011). "Les moulages, reproductions et maquettes de la collection égyptienne des Musées royaux d'Art et d'Histoire : vrai, faux-semblant et hyperréalité". Bulletin des Musées Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire. 82: 17–54.
^"1939-2014"(PDF). Sorop'news. 2014. Archived from the original(PDF) on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
^Capart, Jean (1950). Tout-Ankh-Amon. Pierre Gilbert , Marcelle Werbrouck , E. Bille-de-Mot , Jeanne M. Taupin. Illustrated by Marcelle Baud (2e édition ed.). Bruxelles: Vromant.