Niki de Saint Phalle (1930–2002) was a French American artist, sculptor, and filmmaker whose career became closely associated with the experimental artistic environment of postwar Paris. After moving to France in the 1950s, she entered the city’s avant garde circles through artists connected to Nouveau Réalisme and kinetic art, quickly gaining attention for her radical “Tirs” or shooting paintings, in which she used gunfire to rupture surfaces filled with paint. These performative works challenged traditional ideas of authorship, violence, gender, and artistic control, positioning her as one of the most distinctive artistic voices of the period.