Isabelle Collin Dufresne (September 6, 1935 – June 14, 2014), known professionally as Ultra Violet, was a French-American artist, actress, and writer whose life intersected with some of the most influential creative figures of the 20th century. She is best remembered as one of Andy Warhol’s Factory “superstars,” though her artistic identity extended far beyond that label. Before Warhol, she was a protégée and muse of Salvador Dalí; after the Factory years, she became an independent visual artist and author with a deeply personal spiritual and philosophical outlook.
Early Life
Born in La Tronche, France, Dufresne was raised in a strict, upper-middle-class Catholic household. Her childhood education took place at a Sacred Hearts convent, an experience she later described as oppressive and formative in equal measure. From an early age, she resisted authority and convention, developing a restless independence that would define her life.
At seventeen, she left Europe for New York City, where she lived with an older sister. The move marked the beginning of her lifelong reinvention—one that would repeatedly place her at the center of avant-garde cultural movements.
Dalí and Surrealism
After briefly working at the French Embassy in New York, Dufresne returned to Europe and entered the orbit of surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. She lived and worked with him for over a year, serving as his pupil, assistant, muse, and lover in both Spain and New York. Dalí sharpened her understanding of performance, image, and identity, reinforcing her belief that she herself was a living surrealist creation.
Through Dalí, she gained access to elite artistic circles and appeared in a staged production of Desire Caught by the Tail, a play written by Pablo Picasso. By the mid-1960s, she had already lived several artistic lives—none of them conventional.
Andy Warhol and the Factory
Dufresne met Andy Warhol through Dalí and entered the Factory scene in 1965. Soon after, she adopted the name Ultra Violet, chosen for its symbolic association with transcendence and sensuality. With her striking appearance, aristocratic bearing, and intellectual detachment, she stood apart even among Warhol’s inner circle.
She appeared in numerous Warhol films and became a recognizable figure in the Factory’s mythology. Unlike many of her contemporaries, she largely avoided the heavy drug culture of the era, later crediting this restraint with her survival. Though deeply involved in the scene, she maintained a degree of emotional and physical distance that allowed her to outlast many of her peers.
Ultra Violet attended the Cannes Film Festival with Warhol in 1967 for Chelsea Girls, and later starred alongside fellow Factory icon Taylor Mead in The Secret Life of Hernando Cortez. By the early 1970s, however, she drifted away from the Factory, choosing independence over immersion.
Film and Later Artistic Work
Beyond Warhol’s underground films, Ultra Violet appeared in mainstream and experimental cinema, including Midnight Cowboy, Maidstone, The Phynx, and Taking Off. Over time, her interest shifted away from acting and toward visual art, writing, and conceptual projects.
In 1988, she published her memoir Famous for 15 Minutes: My Years with Andy Warhol, a candid and often critical account of her time at the Factory. The book was widely translated and brought renewed attention to her role in Warhol’s world, though she remained resistant to being defined by it.
She later returned to France, opened a studio in Nice, and published a second book exploring her own artistic philosophy. From the 1990s onward, she lived and worked between New York City and southern France, exhibiting paintings, sculptures, photographs, neon works, and conceptual installations.
Her later projects included deeply personal memorial works responding to the September 11 attacks, several of which entered museum collections. She continued exhibiting into the final year of her life, including a major studio recreation show in Manhattan shortly before her death.
Spiritual Life and Personal Philosophy
In the early 1970s, a severe medical crisis and prolonged depression triggered a profound spiritual transformation. In 1981, Ultra Violet converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a commitment that shaped the remainder of her life. She embraced faith, charity, and service with the same intensity she had once devoted to art and fame.
Though she never married, her life was filled with artistic, romantic, and intellectual relationships. Over the years, she counted dancers, filmmakers, painters, and writers among her lovers and confidants, while remaining fiercely independent.
Death and Legacy
Ultra Violet died of cancer in New York City on June 14, 2014, at the age of 78. She was survived by two sisters and was buried near Grenoble, France.
Her legacy resists easy categorization. She was neither merely a Warhol “superstar” nor simply a muse, but an artist who consistently reclaimed authorship over her own image and meaning. In her final years, she often said that she was less interested in the past than in what came next—a philosophy that mirrored her life of perpetual reinvention.
