Isidore Isou - biography, career, poetry

birthday poems poetry

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  

love poems

friendship poems
funny poems
inspirational poems
birthday poems
wedding poems
child poems
mother poems
sister poems
  sad poems
  funeral poems
 anniversary poems
 family poems
daughter poems
death poems
baby poems
broken heart poems
graduation poems
retirement poems
haiku poems
short poems
sweet poems
teen poems
thank you poems
sympathy poems
life poems
Christian poems
nature poems
black poems
romantic poems

This is the place to search for a free poet biography. The best resource for quotes and poetry.

 

Isidore Isou

Isidore Isou Isidore Isou (January 31, 1925 – July 28, 2007), born Ioan-Isidor Goldstein, was a Romanian-born French poet, film critic and visual artist. He was the founder of Lettrism, an art and literary movement which owed inspiration to Dada and Surrealism.

Born into a Jewish family in Botoþani, Isou started his career as an avant-garde art journalist during World War II, shortly after the August 23 coup saw Romania joining the Allies (see Romania during World War II). With the future social psychologist Serge Moscovici, he founded the magazine Da, which was soon after closed down by the authorities. He moved to Paris, having developed many concepts that intended as a total artistic renewing starting from their lower levels. He called himself a Lettriste, a movement of which he was initially the only member (at the age of 16 he had published the Manifesto in 1942) and published a system of Lettrist hypergraphics. Others soon joined him, and the movement continues to grow, albeit at times under a confusing number of different names.

In the 1960s Lettrist, Lettrist-influenced works and Isidore Isou gained a great deal of respect in France. The influential writer Guy Debord and the artist Gil J. Wolman worked with Isou for a while, before breaking away to form the Lettrist International, which latter merged with the International Movement for an Imaginist Bauhaus, and the London Psychogeographical Association to form the Situationist International, a dissident revolutionary group. This is how Lettrist art influenced the posters, barricades, even clothing in the attempted revolution of 1968. Although it seemed a highly self-contained art in the post-war period, in 1968 it suddenly became more deeply involved in active social change than such movements as Existentialism and Surrealism, and came closer to producing actual transformation than these movements.

Isou’s final public appearance was at the University of Paris on October 21, 2000. Crippled by ill health, he remained house-bound until his death in 2007. Many of his works, and those of the other Lettrists, have recently been reprinted in new editions, together with much hitherto unpublished material, most notably Isou’s very large La Créatique ou la Novatique (1941-1976) (1,390 pages).

Published works

Les Champs de Force de la Peinture Lettriste, Avant-Garde, Paris, 1964.
Manifesto of Lettrist Poetry: A Commonplaces about Words.
Introduction à une Nouvelle Poésie et une Nouvelle Musique, Paris, Gallimard, 1947.
Les Journaux des Dieus, 1950/51.
La Créatique ou la Novatique (1941-1976), Éditions Al Dante, 2003.


About the author:

http://www.wikipedia.org

Home -Link to this page



Free Poetry Contest
Poetry.com will award over 1,200 awards and prizes totaling over $100,000 to amateur poets in the coming months. All contestants are eligible for both of our contests. Join Now!

 

Copy and paste this into the code of your webpage:

Various information on poets - their biographies and other info.

poem contest - poem of the day - terms and conditions - tell a friend - our goals - contact us - bookmark this site - links - poetry contest
This page is best viewed in 1024X768 resolution
Copyright © 2005 LoveThePoem.com - Poets biographies