BRASSENS, Georges (1921-1981)

Later gelatin silver print, signed « G Brassens »
[Paris, between 1944 and 1952], approx. 12.5 × 17.7 cm

Georges Brassens surrounded by his hosts, Impasse Florimont

EUR 400,-
Fact sheet

BRASSENS, Georges (1921-1981)

Later gelatin silver print, signed « G Brassens »
[Paris, between 1944 and 1952], approx. 12.5 × 17.7 cm
Excellent condition; verso blank

Georges Brassens surrounded by his hosts, Impasse Florimont


Requisitioned during the Occupation for the S.T.O. (Service du travail obligatoire) in Germany, Georges Brassens obtained leave in March 1944. Refusing to return to Germany, he was taken in by Marcel and Jeanne Planche and lodged in their modest house at 9 Impasse Florimont, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris. In the small courtyard, a veritable menagerie developed: dogs, cats, canaries, tortoises, a buzzard… and the famous duck he would later celebrate in a song. Brassens remained there for twenty-two years. He also paid tribute to his hostess in the song Jeanne (the female counterpart to Chanson pour l’Auvergnat), released on the album Les Trompettes de la renommée in 1962.

On the threshold of fame, the young Brassens is shown here surrounded by his hosts at Impasse Florimont, Jeanne and Marcel Planche.

Iconography: Georges Brassens… Chez Jeanne, Josée Stroobants & Eric Zimmermann, Didier Carpentier, 1996, p. 21.

Perfectly contrasted print.

Provenance: Estate of Sophie Duvernoy (1930–2025)
A discreet yet essential figure within Georges Brassens’s inner circle, Sophie Duvernoy entered his service in 1969 after having worked for the illustrator Raymond Peynet. She referred to Brassens as “the good master” (le bon maître), a nickname he himself had mischievously suggested when they first met. Born in Poland and nine years younger than the singer-songwriter, she was recruited almost by chance when Peynet moved to the South of France. At the time, Brassens was living in the Le Méridien building on Rue Émile-Dubois, alongside neighbours and friends such as Jacques Brel. Sophie subsequently accompanied Brassens when he moved to Rue Santos-Dumont, quickly becoming a stable presence within an environment shaped by the constant visits of friends and figures from the artistic world. A relationship grounded in trust and mutual understanding gradually emerged between these two reserved personalities. At the heart of this domestic space, which had become a place of artistic creation, Sophie Duvernoy assumed a central role, ensuring the conditions necessary for the work of the poet from Sète. Guardian of silence, manager of household affairs, and intermediary with the outside world, she moved in close proximity to Brassens’s creative process without ever disturbing its equilibrium. Her closeness to the artist also found expression in a limited direct participation in his work. She joined the chœur des copains alongside, among others, Claudine Caillart, Fred Mella, Joël Favreau, Pierre Nicolas, and André Tavernier, contributing backing vocals to two songs: “Tempête dans un bénitier” and “Le Roi.” Following the death of her “good master,” she lived in an apartment purchased by Brassens, who had guaranteed her lifetime use of it — a testament to the singular place she occupied both in his daily life and in the immediate orbit of his artistic creation.

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