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Encyclopedia > Les Automatistes

Les Automatistes were a group of Quebecois artistic dissidents from Montreal, Quebec. The movement was founded in the early 1940s by painter Paul-Émile Borduas. "Les Automatistes" were so called because they were influenced by Surrealism and its theory of automatism.


Members included Marcel Barbeau, Roger Fauteux, Claude Gauvreau, Jean-Paul Riopelle, Pierre Gauvreau, Fernand Leduc, Jean-Paul Mousseau, and Marcelle Ferron.


The movement may have begun with an exhibition Borduas gave in Montreal in 1942. However, "les Automatistes" were soon being exhibited in Paris and New York also. Though it began as a visual arts group, it also spread to other forms of expression, such as playwrights, poets, and dancers.


The title "les Automatistes" came from journalist Tancrede Marcil Jr., in a review of their second exhibit in Montreal (February 15 to March 1, 1947), which appeared in Le Quartier Latin (the University of Montreal's student journal).


In 1948, Borduas published a collective manifesto called the Refus global, which is considered an important document in the cultural history of Quebec. Although the group dispersed soon after the manifesto was published, the movement continues to have influence, and may be considered forerunners of the Quiet Revolution.


External links

  • Text of Refus global (http://callisto.si.usherb.ca:8080/dhsp3/lois/Manifeste_Refus_global.html) (in French)
  • The Automatists and the Book (http://www.collectionscanada.ca/2/5/h5-301-e.html) by Michel Brisebois on Refus Global as a printed book.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Surrealist automatism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (232 words)
In 1919 Breton and Philippe Soupault wrote the first automatic book, Les Champs Magnétiques while The Automatic Message was one of Breton's significant theoretical works about automatism.
In the 1940s and 1950s the Canadian group called Les Automatistes pursued creative work (chiefly painting) based on surrealist principles.
Some Romanian surrealists invented a number of surrealist techniques (such as cubomania, entopic graphomania, and the movement of liquid down a vertical surface) that purported to take automatism to an absurd point, and the name given, "surautomatism", implies that the methods "go beyond" automatism, but this position is controversial.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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