Hugo's work with the
Ballets Russes established her connection with Jean Cocteau, who would introduce her to several important figures in her life, including her future husband French artist
Jean Hugo (1894–1984), great-grandson of
Victor Hugo. She would collaborate with him on ballet designs including
Les mariés de la tour Eiffel (1921), and in 1926 she executed 24 wood engravings after maquettes by Jean Hugo for
Jean Cocteau's production of
Roméo et Juliette. Her involvement with the ballets provided Hugo many opportunities to progress her artwork. She often drew sketches of the ballets' choreography, and had a particular fascination with dancer and choreographer
Vaslav Nijinsky. In 1913 she exhibited her paintings at the
Théâtre des Champs-Elysées during the premiere of
The Rite of Spring. Hugo and Cocteau collaborated to create the ballet
Parade, which premiered on 18 May 1917. Hugo worked on several other of
Satie's ballets, including
Le Piège de Méduse,
Socrate, and
Mercure. Hugo hosted salons with many artists, writers, and musicians in Paris, including avant-garde leaders such as
Pablo Picasso,
André Breton, and
Paul Éluard. She would often sketch her visitors, foreshadowing her portraiture work of the Surrealist leaders later on. == Valentine and the Surrealists ==