Irène Hamoir Explained

Irène Hamoir
Birth Date:1906 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Saint-Gilles, Belgium
Death Place:Watermael-Boitsfort, Belgium
Nationality:Belgian

Irène Hamoir (25 July 1906  - 17 May 1994) was a Belgian novelist and poet, the leading female member of the Belgian surrealist movement. Her poetry was published under the pen name Irine, and she appeared as Lorrie in the writings of her husband, Louis Scutenaire, and the works of René Magritte.

Biography

Born in Saint-Gilles, Belgium into a family with ties to the circus, she worked as a secretary. As an adolescent, Hamoir was already militant in the Young Socialist Guards. Then in 1928, she met the Brussels surrealists (she would later portray then in rough outline as hooligans in her novel Boulevard Jacqmain [1953]; reprinted in 1996 by the Éditions Devillez).[1] She wrote her first poem, Métallique in 1925. At that time she first became involved with the burgeoning Belgian surrealist group forming around artists such as Magritte,, Scutenaire, Marcel Mariën, and Paul Nougé. She married Louis Scutenaire in 1930. Her poems and tales, highly fantastical, were first collected in 1949 in a thin volume with a print run of 200 copies under the pseudonym Irine; in 1976, the collection Corne de brune featured her contributions to periodicals and collective works, as well as the prefaces she wrote for her friends: this volume would enable one to better appreciate her humor.[2]

After Scutenaire's death in 1987, she published her recollections of their life together as Ma vie avec Scut. She died in Watermael-Boitsfort in 1994.

Irène Harmoir legated the Belgium Museum of Fine Art with surrealistic works, such as these by Marc.

Selected works

Poetry

Prose

Sources

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Durozoi, Gérard. History of the Surrealist Movement. The University of Chicago. 2002. 0-226-17412-3. Chicago, Illinois. 673.
  2. Book: Durozoi, Gerard. History of the Surrealist Movement. The University of Chicago Press. 2002. 0-226-17412-3. Chicago. 673.