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Max Jacob

    July 12, 1876 – March 5, 1944

    Max Jacob was a pivotal figure in the Parisian avant-garde, renowned for his profound friendships with artists such as Pablo Picasso and Jean Cocteau. His artistic journey began after departing from the Colonial School, quickly immersing him in the vibrant artistic milieu. Jacob's influence extended to mentoring young artists and his camaraderie with Picasso notably inspired a famous artwork. His later life was tragically cut short by persecution and death in the Drancy internment camp, a somber end for an artist who significantly shaped modern art.

    Max Jacob
    Aus Liebe zum Spiel
    Advice to a Young Poet: Conseils a un jeune poete
    The Central Laboratory
    The Dice Cup
    The Selected Poems of Max Jacob: Volume 24
    The Collar of Honour
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2022

      "When Max Jacob published The Central Laboratory in 1921, Cubism's glory days had passed, the Parisian Dada movement had just officially come to an end, and the surrealist movement was yet to be born. The poetic scene in Paris was between definitions, and in that sense, Jacob's work embodied the moment. The Central Laboratory is distinctly modern yet utterly discordant with anything else that had been published before: a grab bag of popular genres, operettas, Breton folk song, nonsense poetry, nursery rhyme, cockeyed doggerel, pastiche, parody, and puns in which sound often trumps sense. In this collection, Jacob changes register on a dime, shifting from societal sarcasm to mystical sincerity, bearing allegiance to no school or form but his own. Employing the symbolist method of obscure reference, the cubist fracturing of perspective, Dadaist discontinuity, and a dream logic that was at stylistic antipodes with what surrealism would soon become, Jacob drew from almost twenty years of work to assemble an array of "stoppered phials" in this tongue-in-cheek laboratory, each one of them carefully mislabeled. It most clearly presents what Jacob described as his "art of disappointment": the sabotage of readerly expectations in which doubt and disorientation serve as poetic principle, and the traditional jilted lover and jilted poet join forces to propagate a new form of jilted reader. Mixed signals, mysterious rationales, and mocked allegory formulate a camp sensibility, a "queering" of literary style that is as riddled with contradiction as Jacob himself had been in his lifetime. The book remains, a century after its initial publication in French, utterly peculiar and for too long lost in the shadow of Jacob's more famous poetical colleague, Guillaume Apollinaire, as well as the one cast by Jacob's own earlier, more famous book of prose poems, The Dice Cup. Jacob himself said of The Central Laboratory: "it sums up twenty years and reflects twenty states of soul, often twenty styles either suffered or created by me.""--Publisher's description

      The Central Laboratory
    • 2021

      If you head towards our sun (preferably at night) and remember to turn left you will find a pocket universe where evolution took a different turn. When the only sun cooled it went too far and no creature on the universe's sole planet without fur, wings, or, scales could possibly survive.

      The Collar of Honour
    • 1999

      The book highlights the life and contributions of Max Jacob, an influential yet overlooked figure in modernism who associated with renowned artists like Picasso and Modigliani. It offers a thorough exploration of his poetry and artistic significance, presenting his work in a way that showcases his originality and charm. This detailed presentation aims to shed light on Jacob's legacy and enrich the understanding of his role in the artistic movements of his time.

      The Selected Poems of Max Jacob: Volume 24