Paris and travel While at Stanford, Thompson continued to show aptitude for art, and rather than completing her degree, she traveled to France at the invitation of her aunt, Harriet Adelaide Harris. Marguerite visited the
Salon d'Automne the very day that she arrived in Paris. Here, she saw many works by
Henri Matisse and
André Derain, known as the
Fauvists, or Wild Beasts. The Fauvists became known for their use of arbitrary colors and spontaneous, instinctive brushwork. Thompson's encounters with these works had a strong impact on her. It was the intention of her aunt that Thompson attend the
École des Beaux-Arts, but Thompson was turned away as she had never drawn a nude from life. Harris then attempted to have Thompson enrolled at the
Académie de la Grande Chaumière, to study under the academic painter
Francis Auburtin. Thompson had no interest in the formulas of academic painting and instead she chose to attend the
Post-Impressionist school
Académie de La Palette, where she studied under
John Duncan Fergusson and
Jacques-Emile Blanche. The academy encouraged her to pursue her own interests and paint in a style that was uniquely her own. She exhibited at the 1910
Société des Artistes Indépendants, and the 1911
Salon d'Automne, both renowned for their modernist themes. While in Paris, she socialized with
Pablo Picasso, ex-patriate
Gertrude Stein,
Henri Rousseau, and
Henri Matisse through her "Aunt Addie's" connections. At the
Académie de La Palette, she first met her future husband and artistic collaborator,
William Zorach. William admired her passionate individuality, and he said of her modernist
Fauvist artwork "I just couldn't understand why such a nice girl would paint such wild pictures." After Paris, she took a lengthy tour of the world with her aunt in 1911–12. They visited Jerusalem, Egypt, India, Burma, China, Hong Kong, Japan, and Hawaii. Impressed with the foreign places she had seen and eager to write about her experiences, she sent articles to her childhood newspaper, the
Fresno Morning Republican.
Return to the US and marriage After Thompson returned to Fresno, she spent July and August in the mountains to the north-east of Fresno around Big Creek and
Shaver Lake. The lower
Sierra Nevada mountains appealed to her because of their immensity and natural beauty. Ultimately, her parents' disapproval of her artistic pursuits would end her time there and cause her to destroy a large amount of her work. Upon her return to the US, she exhibited in Fresno and Los Angeles. Soon, she moved to New York City and married
William Zorach the same day, December 24, 1912. The couple immediately began to collaborate artistically. Both entered artwork in the 1913
Armory Show. Their success continued as both were invited to participate in the 1916 Forum Exhibition of Modern American Painters. Marguerite also served as the president of the modernist
New York Society of Women Artists in the mid-1920s.
Summer in Yosemite One of Marguerite and William's most influential summers was in 1920 when they spent the summer in
Yosemite Valley, painting the landscape. The couple, with their family, hiked, sketched, and painted the beautiful national park in the Fauvist style. The trip greatly moved the two, and themes from the trip would appear in many of their later works, including Marguerite's works
Memories of my California Childhood (1921) and
Nevada Falls, Yosemite Valley, California (1920).
Textile art After the birth of their daughter, Marguerite found that working with textiles would allow her to give more attention to her children. While both William and Marguerite experimented with textile art, Marguerite was more prolific and better-known for her work. She created mainly
embroideries or
batiks that stylistically resembled her Fauvist paintings. Her embroideries were first shown in New York in 1918, to a positive response. Using textiles as a medium followed the modernist patterns of the turn of the century as new art became increasingly less narrative. It broke down the barriers between crafts and fine art, and William and Marguerite's collaboration broke down gender barriers. Her works were popular and interesting to the public, but art critics gave them mixed reviews because of the low status of embroidery within the fine arts. Today they are celebrated for their feminist subjects and innovative style. Zorach's first exhibition was at Charles David's gallery in New York. Many times the sales of Marguerite's textiles are what kept the family from poverty. Zorach also took great delight in making clothes for her husband and children, although they were not always the conventional style of the times. ==Later years and death==