Claude Mauriac (1914–1996) was a writer and journalist and the elder son of François Mauriac. He married Marie-Claude Mante, the great-niece of Marcel Proust and Edmond Rostand. On and off he kept a journal from the age of twelve, a number of volumes of which were published in the eighties and nineties. He also wrote essays and novels, his 1959 novel Le Dîner en ville receiving the Médicis. He had a strong interest in the nouveau roman.
Showing posts with label Mauriac (François). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mauriac (François). Show all posts
14 September 2015
14 June 2010
François Mauriac and Bordeaux, Gironde (33), France
Libellés :
Bordeaux (33),
France,
French Literature,
Gironde (33),
Mauriac (François),
Zadkine (Ossip)
As this plaque clearly states, François Mauriac (1885-1970) was born in this house, 86 rue du pas St Georges, in the center of Bordeaux.
In Préséances (1921), Mauriac was quite clear about what he saw as the ugliness of Bordeaux women: 'les bordelaises sont laides comme des gouvernantes anglaises'. His mother pointed out that that statement ensured that he would never have a public monument in Bordeaux, although of course she was wrong. This sculpture was erected in the Jardin Public in Bordeaux on the 100th aniversary of Mauriac's birth. But it has not remained there without problems, and in March 1993 the modernist bust (actually a copy of the original) was stolen. It was assumed that the bust would never again see the light of day, although the police received a tip-off in January 1995, and as a result found it in a parcel in a disused warehouse in Bordeaux.
At the back of the bust is the signature of the sculptor Ossip Zadkine, a Russian exiled in the USA when he made the work in 1943. He said that a cure for his homesickness was involving himself in his passions.
In Préséances (1921), Mauriac was quite clear about what he saw as the ugliness of Bordeaux women: 'les bordelaises sont laides comme des gouvernantes anglaises'. His mother pointed out that that statement ensured that he would never have a public monument in Bordeaux, although of course she was wrong. This sculpture was erected in the Jardin Public in Bordeaux on the 100th aniversary of Mauriac's birth. But it has not remained there without problems, and in March 1993 the modernist bust (actually a copy of the original) was stolen. It was assumed that the bust would never again see the light of day, although the police received a tip-off in January 1995, and as a result found it in a parcel in a disused warehouse in Bordeaux.
At the back of the bust is the signature of the sculptor Ossip Zadkine, a Russian exiled in the USA when he made the work in 1943. He said that a cure for his homesickness was involving himself in his passions.
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