Elisa Breton Explained

Elisa Breton (b. Viña del Mar in Chile, 25 April 1906, d. Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, 5 April 2000[1]), was a French artist and writer, and the third wife of the French writer and surrealist André Breton.

Biography

Elisa Breton's maiden name was Elisa Latte Elena Bindhoff Enet.[2] An accomplished pianist, she married the Chilean politician Benjamin Claro Velasco. They had a daughter, Ximena. After her divorce, she immigrated to the United States with her daughter. On 13 August 1943, Ximena drowned during a boat trip off the coast of Massachusetts. After attempting suicide, Bindhoff Enet was joined in New York by a friend who came from Chile to support her.

In 1943, Bindhoff Enet first met André Breton, the leader of the Surrealist movement, in a French restaurant on New York's 56th Street in Manhattan.[3] Breton lived on the same street, and frequented this restaurant. He noticed Bindhoff Enet, introduced himself as a French writer and asked permission to exchange a few words with her. The attraction was mutual:

In the summer of 1944, they traveled in the Gaspé Peninsula in the northeast of Canada.[4] Bindhoff Enet was the inspiration behind Breton's book Arcane 17, where he discusses the death of her daughter in the final prose quartet of Arcane 17, comparing it to the death and resurrection of the Egyptian god Osiris. After the publication of the book, Breton dubbed the manuscript, "this book of high truancy."[3] In August 1945, for practical reasons, Breton and Bindhoff Enet married in Reno, Nevada. On this occasion, they visited Hopi Indian reservations.[1] They returned to France on 25 May 1946.

Following Breton's death in 1966, Elisa Breton “sought to foster what she saw as authentic surrealist activity”. However, she also contributed some works to the surrealist movement, including to the Surrealist journals Médium and Le Surréalisme même, some collages, and a chapter in Le Surréalisme et la Peinture. Elisa Breton was also a mainstay in the Paris Surrealist Group until the major split of 1969.[5] She produced very few works and did not like to “push herself foreword” among the group; she seldom exhibited and is therefore not as well known as other artists in the group. However, Marie Wilson, an American artist active in the Paris Surrealist Group from 1953 to 1960, called Elisa Breton, “The most remarkable woman in the group… a profound and marvelous woman, who contributed enormously to the evolution of surrealism”.

In the shadow of surrealism's theorist, she expressed her talent by making surrealist boxes as well.

Selected works

Surrealist boxes
Writing

Bibliography

Citations

Notes and References

  1. News: Elisa Breton, esposa del escritor surrealista. es. El País. 2000-04-11. 2013-08-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20140816055532/http://elpais.com/diario/2000/04/11/agenda/955404002_850215.html. 2014-08-16. live.
  2. Book: Keith., Aspley. Historical dictionary of surrealism. 2010. Scarecrow Press. 9780810874992. Lanham. 678100732.
  3. Date cited by Breton in 1945, in his dedication to Elisa in the manuscript Arcane 17. Cited by Étienne-Alain Hubert, André Breton, œuvres complètes, tome 3: notice p. 1177.
  4. Book: Clouston, Victoria. The Poetics of Hermeticism: André Breton's Shift Towards the Occult During the War Years. Oxford Brookes University [Phd Dissertation]. 2012. 10. 2019-04-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20170701125024/http://courtauld.ac.uk/research/publications/immediations/immediations-2016-volume-4-number-1/article-immediations-2016-volume-4-number-1/will-atkin-immediations-2016. 2017-07-01. live.
  5. Book: Surrealist women : an international anthology. 1998. University of Texas Press. Rosemont, Penelope.. 029277088X. 1st. Austin. 37782914. registration. 2019-12-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20191216203007/https://archive.org/details/surrealistwomeni00rose. 2019-12-16. live.