Lemaître, Maurice, 1926-
Variant namesMaurice Lemaître, born Moïse Bismuth in Paris in 1926, was a leading voice of the mainstream Lettrism movement in the 1950s and 1960s, and continues to be one of its most active and outspoken proponents to this day. Lemaître joined the Lettrism movement in 1949/1950, four years after it was founded by Isidore Isou. He produced several important theoretical works of the early 1950s, including Sistème de Notasion pour les lètries (1952), Qu'est-ce que le Lettrisme? (1954) and Bilan Lettriste (1955), as well as practical applications in experimental painting, music, book design, theater, and cinema. When Guy Debord led a schism away from the group around Isou in 1952, Lemaître became the leading spokesman of the movement’s “moderate” wing, which he defended through polemical engagements against Debord and the Lettrist (later the Situationist) International.
In addition to being a major theoretician and practicing artist, Lemaître became increasingly important as the movement’s publisher, not only editing but also financing the publication of the first Lettrist revues, including Front de la Jeunesse, Poésie nouvelle, and Ur, among others. He helped organize the first Lettrist exhibitions in the United States, and also provided support for the next generation of Lettrists, including Roland Sabatier and Alain Satié, at crucial points in their careers. The second series of Ur (1963-1967) was an important venue for Lettrist experimentation for such artists and became the launchpad for the Centre de Créativité.
Over the course of his career, Lemaître worked to preserve an historical record of the cultural and political activity of the Lettrism movement. He acquired manuscripts and tracts from Isou and Gabriele Pomerand documenting the first years of the movement from 1945 to 1950, and himself kept notes, letters, tracts, essays, artwork, and the related production materials documenting the movement's output from 1950 onwards.
Lettrism was the first avant-garde movement to emerge from the postwar generation in Europe. Its origins are deeply rooted in the Second World War; from the beginning its leaders situated the movement explicitly vis-à-vis currents of European Modernism-particularly Dada and Surrealism-that were well-established in the years leading up to the war. Lettrism was central to the younger generation’s confrontation with both the legacies of modernist experimentation (political and philosophical as well as aesthetic) and the wartime experience itself. The movement’s development in the immediate postwar years is also integral to the proliferation of new avant-garde movements across Europe that came together to form a distinctly new cultural climate in the second half of the last century.
From the guide to the Bismuth-Lemaître papers, 1920-2009, (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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referencedIn | Lettrist movement papers, 1949-1988 | Getty Research Institute | |
creatorOf | Queneau, Raymond, 1903-1976. Lettrism papers, 1946-1965. | Getty Research Institute | |
referencedIn | Isou, Isidore. Letters sent, 1959. | Getty Research Institute | |
creatorOf | Isou, Isidore. Manuscripts by Isidore Isou and Maurice Lemaître, 1940-1970. | Getty Research Institute | |
creatorOf | Bismuth-Lemaître papers, 1920-2009 | Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library | |
creatorOf | Mouvement lettriste. Lettrist movement papers, 1949-1988. | Getty Research Institute | |
referencedIn | Isou, Isidore. Isidore Isou drafts for Fondements pour la transformation intégrale du théâtre, circa 1950. | Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library | |
creatorOf | Williams, Emmett,. Concrete poetry archives, early 1940's-1967. G-L. | Library of Congress |
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Filters:
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associatedWith | Isou, Isidore. | person |
associatedWith | Mouvement lettriste. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Pomerand, Gabriel, 1926-1972 | person |
associatedWith | Queneau, Raymond, 1903-1976. | person |
associatedWith | Sabatier, Roland, 1942- | person |
associatedWith | Satié, Alain, 1944- | person |
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Experimentalfilms |
French literature |
Lettrism |
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Person
Birth 1926