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Henri Michaux

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Name
  
Henri Michaux

Role
  
Poet

Period
  
Lyrical abstraction


Henri Michaux The Allen Ginsberg Project Spontaneous Poetics 131

Born
  
24 May 1899Namur, Belgium (
1899-05-24
)

Occupation
  
Poet, journalist and painter.

Genre
  
Surrealism, Fantastic style, Asemic writing.

Notable works
  
My Properties (1929); Plume (1938); Miserable Miracle: Mescaline (1956).

Died
  
October 19, 1984, Paris, France

Artwork
  
Mescaline Drawing, Mouvement, K 254

Parents
  
Octave Jean Marie Michaux, Jeanne Marie Constance Blanke

Books
  
Miserable Miracle, Darkness Moves, A barbarian in Asia, Un barbare en Asie, Ecuador

Similar People
  
Emil Cioran, Asger Jorn, Stephane Mallarme, Comte de Lautreamont, Paul Celan

Gillian conoley on henri michaux


Henri Michaux ([miʃo]; 24 May 1899 – 19 October 1984) was a highly idiosyncratic Belgian-born poet, writer, and painter who wrote in French. He later took French citizenship. Michaux is best known for his esoteric books written in a highly accessible style. His body of work includes poetry, travelogues, and art criticism. Michaux travelled widely, tried his hand at several careers, and experimented with psychedelic drugs, especially LSD and mescaline, which resulted in two of his most intriguing works, Miserable Miracle and The Major Ordeals of the Mind and the Countless Minor Ones.

Contents

Henri Michaux HenriMichauxSansTitre196045x32cmjpg

Gillian conoley reading henri michaux


Travels and work

Henri Michaux New Directions Publishing Company Henri Michaux

In 1930–1931, Henri Michaux visited Japan, China and India. The result of this trip is the book A Barbarian in Asia. Oriental culture became one of his biggest influences. The philosophy of Buddhism, and Oriental calligraphy, later became principal subjects of many of his poems and inspired many of his drawings.

Henri Michaux Composition Henri Michaux WikiArtorg

He also traveled to Africa and to the American continent, where he visited Ecuador and published the book Ecuador. His travels across the Americas finished in Brazil in 1939, and he stayed there for two years.

Henri Michaux wwwcitylightscomresourcespersons6049gif

Michaux is best known for his stories about Plume – "a peaceful man" – perhaps the most unenterprising hero in the history of literature, and his many misfortunes. All his writing is strange and original. As his translator put it in Darkness Moves, the most comprehensive Michaux anthology in English, his poems are "messages from his inner space." That space may be transformed by drugs as in Miserable Miracle or by terrifying vision, as in "Space of the Shadows" (in Darkness Moves) but the "messages" from it are always as clear and concrete as possible.

Henri Michaux Greidolken und podartschen Saiten Ostschweizer Kulturmagazin

Henri Michaux was also a highly original artist. His work is not quite figurative, but suggestive. The Museum of Modern Art in Paris and the Guggenheim Museum in New York both had major shows of his work in 1978.

In 1955 he became a citizen of France, and he lived the rest of his life there along with his family. In 1965 he won the National Prize of Literature, which he refused to accept.

References

Henri Michaux Wikipedia