: Delicate line drawings by Edouard Manet, brilliantly colored
brushstrokes by Pablo Picasso and eye-catching watercolors by
Joan Miró - all designed to appear between the covers of a book -
are some of the highlights of a new exhibition, "French Book
Art|Livres d'Artistes: Artists and Poets in Dialogue," at The New
York Public Library.
Although better known for their works on canvas, artists such as
Picasso, Henri Matisse and René Magritte collaborated with poets
such as Mallarmé, Apollinaire, Gide and others to pioneer the
concept of the artist's book, in which words and pictures come
together in a unique fashion. The library, at 42nd Street and
Fifth Avenue, is the only venue in the United States for this
exhibition, which will be on view, at no charge, through August
19, at the D. Samuel and Jeane H. Gottesman Exhibition Hall on
the first floor
Alfred Jarry (1873-1907), "Ubu Roi (King Ubu)," lithographic
poster for the periodical La Critique, Paris, 1896.
Beginning in France in the 1870s, as a vibrant arts scene was
emerging following the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71), the joint
ventures between artists and poets produced some of the world's
most richly imagined artists' books. "French Book Art" exhibits 126
books created between 1874 and 1999, many of which are accompanied
by counterpoints - original works of art relating to or contrasting
with the books on display. Also featured will be photographs and
sculpture depicting many of the artists and authors represented in
the exhibition.
The exhibition is co-organized by the Bibliothèque littéraire
Jacques Doucet, Paris, and The New York Public Library, with
items drawn from the collections of both institutions, along with
rarely seen works from private French collections. The exhibition
is curated by Yves Peyré, director of the Bibliothèque littéraire
Jacques Doucet, with the assistance of H. George Fletcher, the
Brooke Russell Astor director for special collections at The New
York Public Library.
Noted for their striking beauty, unique formats and variety in
size and theme, the artists' books on view are distinguished in
their page design, typography, imagery, printing processes and
paper quality.

Blaise Cendrars (1887-1961) and Sonia Delaunay (1885-1979), La
Prose du Transsibérien et de la petite Jehanne de France (The
Prose of the Transsiberian and of Little Jeannie of France),
Paris, Editions des Hommes Nouveaux, 1913.
From watercolors and washes to etchings and woodcuts, the
artworks carry the signature styles of the masters who created
them. Related drawings, etchings, pamphlets, posters and manuscript
pages serve as counterpoints, offering context and background for
the collaborations between the artists and poets.
In addition, a portrait gallery constitutes an exhibition within
the exhibition, presenting photographs of many of the featured
artists and poets by master photographers such as Nadar, Brassaï,
Man Ray and Henri Cartier-Bresson.
The exhibition traces the history of the French avant-garde
movement in art and literature, which sought to break from
established norms of book publishing and traditional standards of
typography, printing, page design and paper selection.
The books on view illustrate the creative contribution made by
artists and poets associated with a wide variety of artistic
movements, including Symbolism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism and
Existentialism. The collaborators worked as equal partners, each
contributing a balanced proportion of the whole. On occasion, an
individual poet or artist was responsible for both text and
image, resulting in a dialogue with the self.
The books on view ranges from Manet and Stephane Mallarmé,
L'Après-midi d'un faune (The Afternoon of a Faun),
1876, and Le Voyage d'Urien (Urien's Voyage), 1893,
by André Gide and the artist Maurice Denis, to the collaboration
between poet Tristan Tzara and Picasso, Le Rose et le
chien (The Rose and the Dog), 1958 and Au travail
ma chérie (Darling, Get to Work), 1992, by Dominique
Fourcade and Pierre Buraglio.
For more information, docent tours, other exhibitions at the
other libraries in the NYPL system, www.nypl.org.