Elisa BretonElisa Breton (b. Viña del Mar in Chile, 25 April 1906, d. Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, 5 April 2000[1]), was a French artist and writer, and the third wife of the French writer and surrealist André Breton. BiographyElisa Breton's maiden name was Elisa Latte Elena Bindhoff Enet.[2] An accomplished pianist, she married the Chilean politician Benjamin Claro Velasco.[citation needed] They had a daughter, Ximena. After her divorce, she immigrated to the United States with her daughter.[citation needed] On 13 August 1943, Ximena drowned during a boat trip off the coast of Massachusetts.[citation needed] After attempting suicide, Bindhoff Enet was joined in New York by a friend who came from Chile to support her.[citation needed] In 1943, Bindhoff Enet first met André Breton, the leader of the Surrealist movement,[2] in a French restaurant on New York's 56th Street in Manhattan.[3] Breton lived on the same street, and frequented this restaurant. He noticed Bindhoff Enet, introduced himself as a French writer and asked permission to exchange a few words with her. The attraction was mutual:
In the summer of 1944, they traveled in the Gaspé Peninsula in the northeast of Canada.[5] Bindhoff Enet was the inspiration behind Breton's book Arcane 17,[2] where he discusses the death of her daughter in the final prose quartet of Arcane 17, comparing it to the death and resurrection of the Egyptian god Osiris.[2] After the publication of the book, Breton dubbed the manuscript, "this book of high truancy."[3] In August 1945, for practical reasons, Breton and Bindhoff Enet married in Reno, Nevada. On this occasion, they visited Hopi Indian reservations.[1] They returned to France on 25 May 1946.[citation needed] Following Breton's death in 1966,[2] Elisa Breton “sought to foster what she saw as authentic surrealist activity”.[2] However, she also contributed some works to the surrealist movement, including to the Surrealist journals Médium and Le Surréalisme même, some collages, and a chapter in Le Surréalisme et la Peinture.[2] Elisa Breton was also a mainstay in the Paris Surrealist Group until the major split of 1969.[6] She produced very few works and did not like to “push herself foreword” among the group; she seldom exhibited and is therefore not as well known as other artists in the group.[6] However, Marie Wilson, an American artist active in the Paris Surrealist Group from 1953 to 1960, called Elisa Breton, “The most remarkable woman in the group… a profound and marvelous woman, who contributed enormously to the evolution of surrealism”.[6] In the shadow of surrealism's theorist, she expressed her talent by making surrealist boxes as well. Selected works
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