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Max Jacob

A Life in Art and Letters

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A comprehensive and moving biography of Max Jacob, a brilliant cubist poet who lived at the margins of fame.

Though less of a household name than his contemporaries in early twentieth century Paris, Jewish homosexual poet Max Jacob was Pablo Picasso's initiator into French culture, Guillaume Apollinaire's guide out of the haze of symbolism, and Jean Cocteau's loyal friend. As Picasso reinvented painting, Jacob helped to reinvent poetry with compressed, hard-edged prose poems and synapse-skipping verse lyrics, the product of a complex amalgamation of Jewish, Breton, Parisian, and Roman Catholic influences.

In Max Jacob, the poet's life plays out against the vivid backdrop of bohemian Paris from the turn of the twentieth century through the divisions of World War II. Acclaimed poet Rosanna Warren transports us to Picasso's ramshackle studio in Montmartre, where Cubism was born; introduces the artists gathered at a seedy bar on the left bank, where Max would often hold court; and offers a front-row seat to the artistic squabbles that shaped the Modernist movement.

Jacob's complex understanding of faith, art, and sexuality animates this sweeping work. In 1909, he saw a vision of Christ in his shabby room in Montmartre, and in 1915 he converted formally from Judaism to Catholicism—with Picasso as his godfather. In his later years, Jacob split his time between Paris and the monastery of Benoît-sur-Loire. In February 1944, he was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to Drancy, where he would die a few days later.

More than thirty years in the making, this landmark biography offers a compelling, tragic portrait of Jacob as a man and as an artist alongside a rich study of his groundbreaking poetry—in Warren's own stunning translations. Max Jacob is a nuanced, deeply researched, and essential contribution to Modernist scholarship.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 10, 2020
      Poet, critic, and translator Warren (Fables of the Self) brings French writer and artist Jacob (1876–1944) to life in this exhaustive biography. Drawing on over three decades of archival research, she carefully traces Jacob’s journey, from his provincial childhood, to his student days in Paris, though his Zelig-like path through the French avant-garde. Jacob met Picasso at the latter’s first Paris show in 1901, and by 1903 the two were living in a converted Montmartre piano factory that became a gathering place for artists and the incubator for Cubism. While assisting friends, including Apollinaire, Cocteau, and Satie, with their creative efforts, Jacob also produced his own celebrated paintings, poetry, and novels. These were profoundly influenced by the vision of Christ he experienced in 1909, which inspired his conversion from Judaism to Catholicism in 1915 and a newly mystical aesthetic. Jacob continued to expand his creative vision and promote fellow artists up until near his tragic death; arrested by the Gestapo, he died of pneumonia in a concentration camp outside Paris in 1944. Warren paints Jacob’s life and times in vibrant colors, providing expansive views into this too-little-known writer who exerted a large force in creating modern French literature and art. Agent: Kathleen Anderson, Anderson Literary Management.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from September 1, 2020
      Thoroughgoing biography of a now-little-known French artist, writer, and collector of consequential friendships. Overstuffed without being claustrophobic--in the manner of Roger Shattuck's kindred study The Banquet Years--poet Warren's book will introduce most readers to Max Jacob (1876-1944), someone, she writes, "I had never heard of." Jacob was Breton, Jewish, gay, and Pablo Picasso's first friend in Paris, and he served as an important link between the symbolists and the surrealists. He was a writer and painter himself, almost always broke, but he was generous with his money and time. To read this book is to confront a catalog of important writers, artists, and thinkers of the period, all of whom, it seems, Jacob knew: Modigliani, �luard, Cocteau, Queneau, Leiris, Chagall, Braque...the list goes on. His homosexuality, which in those days could occasion scandal and imprisonment, was sometimes an issue, inasmuch as young men took advantage of his generosity and helped themselves to his money and social connections. He converted to Catholicism in an effort, it seems, to "cleanse his soul and ensure his salvation" while also clearing the slate for further erotic encounters: "As long as you don't sin, you're saved," he wrote. "If you sin, you go to confession, you're still saved." The conversion, and his long residence in the monastic community of Saint-Beno�t-sur-Loire, did not help when Vichy France and the occupying Nazis imposed racial laws on France that would have sent Jacob to Auschwitz had he not died of pneumonia before he could be transported there. Warren shows that, while not a giant like so many of his friends, Jacob was more central to France's early-20th-century artistic and literary history than he has been given credit for. He was also a wonderful storyteller who, for one thing, composed a "mythic genealogy" linking a storied pistol of Picasso's to Alfred Jarry when in fact the two never met. An exemplary work of biography and intellectual history; essential reading for students of literary and artistic modernism.

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