Patrick Waldberg (1913-1985) was a Franco-American art critic known for his profiles of Surrealist artists.

Biography

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Born in Santa Monica, California, Waldberg moved to Paris as a child with his family. In 1932, and while still a student (age 19), he joined Boris Souvarine's Democratic Communist Circle. There he met Georges Bataille and his friends Michel Leiris and André Masson, and was initiated by them into a wild night life. Waldberg would chronicle those years in his novel La Clé de cendre (The key made of ashes), published posthumously in 1999.[1]

1937 saw him back in California to take care of "family matters". However, a letter from Georges Bataille reached him there, urging him to return to Paris in order to take part in a Nietzschean secret society Bataille was then forming, called Acéphale ("headless"). Waldberg heeded the call in September 1938, and he says this permanently changed his life. From 1938 to 1940 Waldberg would serve as the secretary of Bataille's "official" group, the College of Sacred Sociology.[2]

In the winter of 1939, Waldberg was invited by Georges Bataille to move in with him to his house in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a suburb of Paris.[2]

In the fall of that year he joined the French army to help repel the German invasion. In March 1940, Isabelle Farner gave birth to his son Michel Waldberg [fr]. After the French defeat Patrick and Isabelle fled to the USA where they took up residence in New York. In 1941 Patrick became a founder of the "Voice of America" radio broadcasts. It seems it was he who then attracted André Breton to also become an announcer on Voice of America.In 1942 Waldberg quit Voice of America to join the US army intelligence service, taking part in the African campaign and then the Normandy invasion. During this time Isabelle stayed in New York.[3][4]

In 1959 he left Paris to move to the French village of Seillans, where his second wife Line Jubelin was from. Max Ernst and his own second wife Dorothea Tanning joined him there. Their houses are now a Max Ernst museum and a Maison Waldberg museum. In 1964 Waldberg organized a major Surrealist exhibit at Gallerie Charpentier. André Breton took umbrage at this however, due to Waldberg's defection in 1951. Breton and his group printed a declaration condemning the show, ""Face aux liquidateurs", and then a subsequent pamphlet, "Cramponnez-vous à la table (Petite Suite surréaliste à l'affaire du Bazar Charpentier)".[3][4]

References

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  1. ^ Patrick Waldberg, La clé de cendre, Paris: Editions de la Différence, 1999.
  2. ^ a b Patrick Waldberg, "Acéphalogramme", in Marina Galletti, ed., L'Apprenti-sorcier, Paris: Editions de la Différence, 1999.
  3. ^ a b Biography - Editions de la Différence Archived 2016-10-06 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ a b José Pierre, « WALDBERG PATRICK - (1913-1985)  », Encyclopædia Universalis (online), accessed 5 October 2016.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Loplop

and collage Loplop Presents (1932) was used as the frontispiece of Patrick Waldberg's book Surrealism. Loplop first appeared in Ernst's collage novels La

Isabelle Waldberg

Giacometti, Georges Bataille, André Masson and her future husband Patrick Waldberg. From 1938 to 1940 she studied sociology and ethnography at the Ecole

Inner Experience

was criticized for this privately by Jules Monnerot, and publicly by Patrick Waldberg. Boris Souvarine regarded its publication as a sign of Bataille's acceptance

Waldberg

Waldberg may refer to: Waldberg (Bobingen), a constituent community of Bobingen, Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany Waldberg (Windigsteig), a village in Windigsteig

World of Art

Women, Art, and Society. 4, Richard J. Powell's Black Art and Culture in the 20th Century. 5, Patrick Waldberg's Surrealism. 6, James H. Rubin's Monet.

Georges Malkine

only be discerned from a certain angle and in a certain light." — Patrick Waldberg (1970) Georges Malkine chose not to expose his private life and, apart

List of books banned in New Zealand

Indecent Publications Tribunal 1968 Restricted Eros Modern' Style Patrick Waldberg Indecent Publications Tribunal 1968 Restricted 1797 Juliette Marquis

Murdering Airplane

Quinn, Edward, with contribution from Max Ernst, Uwe M. Schneede, Patrick Waldberg, and Diane Waldman. (1977) Max Ernst. New York Graphic Society (Little