Hélène Jourdan-Morhange

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From left to right: Luc-Albert Moreau, Hélène Jourdan-Morhange, Madeleine Grey, Germaine Malançon and Maurice Ravel in 1925.

Hélène Jourdan-Morhange (30 January 1888 – 15 May 1961) was a French classical violinist.

Biography[edit]

Née Hélène Morhange, she married the French painter Jacques Jean Raoul Jourdan (born 22 June 1880 in Paris), who died at the Battle of Verdun 25 March 1916.

An interpreter inspired by the works of her contemporaries, she was noticed as early as 1917 by Maurice Ravel, of whom she became a friend and favourite interpreter. In 1927, Ravel dedicated to her his Violin Sonata No. 2 and ensured the premiere of the Sonata for Violin and Cello in 1922.

She was the companion of the painter and engraver Luc-Albert Moreau [fr], whom she presented to Ravel.

With arthritis in her hands, she had to end her career early.

Publications[edit]

  • Ravel et nous, Éditions du Milieu du monde, Geneva, 1945, (Biography of Maurice Ravel, with a foreword by Colette and illustrated by Luc-Albert Moreau).
  • Ravel d'après Ravel, Éditions du Cervin, Lausanne, 1953; a work reissued by Jean Roy, Ravel d'après Ravel suivi de Rencontres avec Vlado Perlemuter, éditions Alinéa, 1989, 159 pages.
  • (Publication from radio interviews with Vlado Perlemuter around their common master and friend, Maurice Ravel.)