Fernande Barrey left her native Picardy in about 1908 and moved to Paris, where she survived as a
child prostitute. She then became the model for many painters, including
Amedeo Modigliani and
Chaïm Soutine, who persuaded her to study painting and art history at the
École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts. In March 1917, she met the Japanese artist
Tsuguharu Foujita at the
Café de la Rotonde in
Montparnasse, who fell madly in love with her and married her thirteen days later. In 1918 the couple moved to escape the German bombs to Cagnes-sur-Mer, where she spent a year painting and meeting many friends. During this period, she became friends with
Jeanne Hébuterne, the bride of Modigliani. When Modigliani died of tuberculosis in 1920, Barrey tried in vain to console the new widow, but Jeanne, eight months pregnant, committed suicide. During the year 1925, the couple led a very open relationship, both having relations with people of both sexes. The painter did not forgive Fernande after she had a love affair with his cousin, Koyanagi, a painter. He then locked himself with the Belgian artist Lucie Badoul (called Youki) for three days during which Fernande desperately sought her husband in the Parisian morgues. In 1928, the couple divorced and she lived with Koyanagi in Montmartre. When Koyanagi was separated himself in 1935, his relationship with Tsuguharu Foujita improved; he helped her financially until her death. Some sources link Fernande Barrey and the famous Miss Fernande, favourite model of the female photographer
Jean Agélou, who appeared on many
erotic postcards, although this has never been proven. As a painter, she exhibited the paintings
Josiane and
Les Pêches at the
Salon d'Automne in 1929. ==References==