Background
Gloria Claire de Herrera was born in Los Angeles, California. Her mother was named Mildred de Herrera.
Gloria Claire de Herrera was born in Los Angeles, California. Her mother was named Mildred de Herrera.
Mr. Byrnes offered de Herrera a secretarial job. She learned conservation techniques while working at Los Angeles County Museum of History, Science, and Artist While she was a young art conservator in Los Angeles, she became acquainted with artist Manitoba Ray and art dealer William Nelson Copley.
She was romantically involved with Copley.
In Paris, she worked as an art restorer under Maurice LeFebvre-Foinet. lieutenant was through that job that she became important to the later works of Henri Matisse, assembling his colorful paper collages with her own glue recipe to hold them firmly in place.
Suspected of harboring Algerian Independence movement members in her apartment, Gloria de Herrera was arrested and spent two months in jail. She was exiled from France for several years.
She returned to stay in 1968, but her Paris connections were lost, and she moved to the Dordogne region in 1973.
While there she was part of the conservation effort at the Lascaux Caves, reproducing the endangered Cro-Magnon paintings at the site. Her versions were displayed at the museum in Lascaux. Gloria de Herrera died in June 1985 in Brive-la-Gaillarde, from throat cancer.
She was 56 years old.
Her papers are at the Getty Research Institute, and they include audio recordings of an interview with de Herrera, conducted by James Byrnes in 1983.