PRÉVERT, Jacques (1900-1977)

Autograph poem signed « Jacques Prévert », enriched with a small drawing
[Antibes, 1956], 1 p. in-plano

« The color of light and that of darkness are twin sisters of the same clarity »

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PRÉVERT, Jacques (1900-1977)

Autograph poem signed « Jacques Prévert », enriched with a small drawing representing a small cat
[Antibes, 1956], 1 p. in-plano
Some typographic annotation with pencil, fold marks, tiny tears on upper and lower margins

Very nice tribute in the form of a poem to his friend Pierre Charbonnier


« La couleur de la lumière
et celle de l’obscurité
sont deux sœurs
jumelles de la même clarté
Le brouillard sans la splendeur
du souvenir ensoleillé
ne serait qu’un faux aveugle
avec un chœur de fausse fidélité
Tout cela Pierre Charbonnier le sait
Un mur
Une peinture sur ce mur
éclaire la maison
Dans sa simplicité singulière
son apparente réalité
la rivière
dans le cadre comme dans l’écluse
garde sa fraîcheur première
Et comme au pied du mur
on peut voir le maçon
on peut voir en peinture
le peintre sur ce mur
Pierre Charbonnier qui regarde
la rivière
et ses écluses de fer
avec tendresse détresse et amitié
avec ardente lucidité
Jacques Prévert »


A poet familiar with the dramatic arts, Jacques Prévert is known for his style that rhymes poetry and language plays.

A great friend of Prévert, the painter Pierre Charbonnier (1897-1978) was dedicated by the poet to his poem “Paysage” in March 1956, in Antibes, which resumed the mode of free verses without an apparent rhyme scheme, with attention to sounds. The two poems are similar in that they are built in the mode of ekphrasis, offering both literary and pictorial creation. In our poem, this invitation to contemplate is all the more remarkable for the play on the homophony of heart and “choir”, as if to make each reader the voice carried to understand and say the respectful paintings. At times, the material descriptions are mixed with abstract notions, such as “tenderness”, “friendship”, “lucidity”, thus leading the reader to find his own feelings over the course of the text. Also, language games are numerous, the most remarkable of which is perhaps this association in the mode of an almost oxymoronic paronomasis, “tenderness distress”, reminding us that this is indeed the pen of Prévert.

Spectacular format (45,5 x 28,5 cm)