Jean Lescure (French pronunciation:[ʒɑ̃lɛskyʁ]; 14 September 1912 – 17 October 2005) was a French poet.
Biography
Lescure was born in Asnières-sur-Seine. In 1938, he published his first plaquette of poems, "Le voyage immobile", and launched the review "Messages" (two issues in 1939: "William Blake" and "Metaphysics and poetry").
Jean Lescure became co-director of the clandestine review "Les Lettres françaises" and was one of the founders of the underground organization, the "Comité National des Ecrivains". After the Liberation he was appointed director of the French Radio. He was an early member of Oulipo.
Lescure translated Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure" (1949) and the complete works of Giuseppe Ungaretti (1953). He wrote introductions to the work of many French artists (Bertholle, Chastel, Estève, Gischia, Lapicque, Pignon, Prassinos, Singier, Ubac) and essays on the philosopher Gaston Bachelard and André Malraux. He died, aged 93, in Paris.
Selected bibliography
Poems
Le Voyage immobile, Jean Flory, Paris, 1936.
Une anatomie du secret, Ides et Calendes, Neuchâtel et Paris, 1946.
Les Falaises de Taormina, Np., Limoges, 1949.
La Plaie ne se ferme pas, Charlot, Paris, 1949.
Treize poèmes, Gallimard, Paris, 1960.
Noires compagnes de mes murs, Florentin Mouret, Avignon, 1961.
Drailles, Gallimard, Paris, 1968.
Itinéraires de la nuit, Clancier-Guénaud, Paris, 1982.
Il Trionfo della morte, Clancier-Guénaud, Paris, 1984.
La Belle Jardinière, Clancier-Guénaud, Paris, 1988.
Le Satyre est con, Editions Proverbe, Marchainville, 1998.
Gnomides, Editions Proverbe, Marchainville, 1999.
Journal de la Boue, Editions Proverbe, Marchainville, 2001.
Feuilles de tremble, Editions Proverbe, Marchainville, 2001.