Jeanne de Montagnac
French singer and salonnière / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clémence Elise Marie Jeanne "Pata" de Montagnac (16 April 1882 – 27 June 1966), later known as Madame Maximilian von Jaunez and Comtesse Charles de Polignac, was a French socialite, salonnière, arts patron, and singer. She co-hosted salons at the Avenue Henri-Martin hôtel particulier of her aunt by marriage, Princess Edmond de Polignac, and performed with Richard Strauss and at the celebrated salons of Marguerite de Saint Marceaux. She ceased performing in 1925, but remained active in musical circles. She was a close friend of the composers Francis Poulenc and Gabriel Fauré. De Montagnac was the subject of a portrait and two etchings by Paul César Helleu and of three portraits by Philip de László. De László's second portrait of her, completed in 1911, was purchased by the Glasgow Corporation while on exhibit in Glasgow in 1913, making it the artist's first work to be acquired by a public collection in the United Kingdom.
Jeanne de Montagnac | |
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Born | Clémence Elise Marie Jeanne de Montagnac (1882-04-16)16 April 1882 |
Died | 27 June 1966(1966-06-27) (aged 84) Paris, France |
Occupation(s) | socialite, salonnière, arts patron, singer |
Title | Comtesse Charles de Polignac |
Spouses |
Count Charles de Polignac
(m. 1925) |
Children | 2 (including Nelly de Vogüé) |
Parent(s) | Louis Elizé de Montagnac, 2nd Baron de Montagnac Henriette Delphine Rosalés y de Beusse |
Family | Montagnac (by birth) Polignac (by marriage) |