Categories Autographs - Arts & Letters , Douanier ROUSSEAU , JARRY Alfred , New items
The earthy meeting by Alfred Jarry and Douanier Rousseau.
“You absolutely have the look of a painter and you have to paint.”
2.000€
“You absolutely have the look of a painter and you have to paint.”
2.000€
[Alfred JARRY – Customs officer ROUSSEAU] – Jean SALTAS (1865.1954)
Signed autograph manuscript.
Nine folio pages on cream paper. Slnd
A memory of Alfred Jarry – How the customs officer Rousseau became a painter.
“You absolutely have the look of a painter and you have to paint.”
Truculent fanciful story – seeming to have remained unpublished – of the first meeting of Alfred Jarry and Douanier Rousseau, resembling certain “mystifying” stories of the author of Ubu-roi himself.
_____________________________________________________
“(…) One day Jarry had spent the night at the Halles accompanied by a few friends including a painter and his model. He returned to his house in his house with them when crossing the Pont des Arts they saw on the bank of the Seine an individual who was walking there back and forth. Jarry asked him what he was doing in such a place for an hour so morning: "I am customs, replied the man, and I am here for my job." Jarry stared at him, with an air as deep as it is serious. “My friend, he said to him, you absolutely have a painter and you have to make painting.” The man first objected that he did not know how to paint and that he doubted it ever. But Jarry stubbornly. He repeated that he was born to be a painter, that he had genius without suspecting it, that it often happens among artists, that his vocation broke on his face, and to prove it to him on the spot, placing In front of him the bridge of the artist who accompanied him, while the model was put in the simple device. At the foot of a tree, he ordered him to paint the scene he had in front of him: Eve in earthly paradise, waiting at the foot of the apple tree his victim, poor Adam, our father to all.
The unhappy customs officer was already beginning to believe that he had so far ignored his true vocation, as the tone of Jarry was persuasive and animated. The brush in hand, he traced on the canvas a semblance of a woman with a semblance of a tree. However, there was the question of the apple tree because we know that it was by means of an apple that our mother Eve seduced the first man. The customs officer was very embarrassed. Jarry then gave him the advice to take on his palette of the red, and that and there, in the tree, to indicate the apples by tracing circles, which the obey pupil did. […] Jarry was very satisfied with the result , and delighted with the discovery he had made: “It is very good, my friend” he said to the new painter when he had finished. »»
However, officers arrive and take everyone to the police station, where a report is drawn up followed by an appearance in court for indecent assault. Jarry pleads the cause of the customs officer’s discovered artistic “genius” so well that the president acquits everyone.
“The customs officer, moved to tears, thanked the magistrate effusively and as a token of his gratitude offered to paint the portrait of his “lady” for New Year’s Day. He also increased his visits for this purpose to the wife of the magistrate who let herself be tempted and ended up agreeing to pose in front of the new artist. […] Douanier Rousseau was now a painter. He did not forget the one who had revealed his vocation to him and had committed him to this great career. When Jarry died, we found at his house in his room on rue Cassette, among the most heterogeneous objects […] a portrait which appeared to be the work of Douanier Rousseau. The figure was replaced by a large hole. It is said that one evening, or rather one morning when he was returning home, Jarry, surprised and frightened at the same time by this image which perhaps resembled him at that moment, had in this place punctured the canvas of 'a punch, a hundred times regrettable sacrilege. […]
_____________________________________________________
Henri Rousseau, known as the Customs Officer, was born in Laval like Alfred Jarry, in 1844 (around thirty years before his compatriot). If nothing, in fact, seemed to predispose him to painting, it was around 1884 when he became a grant agent in Paris that he devoted himself to drawing and painting. From 1886, he began to exhibit regularly at the Salon des Indépendants. It was around 1894 that Alfred Jarry discovered the Douanier Rousseau, of whom he became a friend and he made this “new” art known in the circles of the Mercure de France , where a laudatory article appeared in particular on The War Exposed to the Independents of 1894. The names of Jarry and Douanier Rousseau now remain universally known and frequently associated.
Doctor Jean Saltas (1865,1954), Greek doctor and literator born in Turkey, naturalized French in 1900, met Jarry in the Danville show in 1897. Their attendance became assiduous from 1905, when they collaborated with the translation and adaptation of the Roman of the Greek writer Emmanuel Rhodes, La Papesse Jeanne .
During the winter of 1905-1906, Saltas and Jarry worked hard, often in very difficult conditions for Jarry: "He was already very morally and physically exhausted," said Saltas later. He arrived at home, often by bad weather, in slippers or with pierced shoes, wet feet. Taking all the precautions to spare his susceptibility which was large, I slipped under the feet a hot brick, then we worked. It was from this collaboration that Jeanne Papess came out. This was the last work of Alfred Jarry. »»
_____________________________________________________
We enclose two autograph tickets from Claude Terrasse to an unknown recipient.
January 21, 1922: “ I have still led an impossible life since October. At the moment I am finishing a play in 3 large acts which must be shown at the Gaîté at the end of February – and the days and nights are barely enough. In addition, we repeat Ubu-roi and Pârius, at the Work and at the Michel. So much so that I don't have a minute to myself. »
February 24, 1922: “ If it amuse you to see Ubu-roi. here are 2 armchairs. »
© 2025 Autographes des Siècles - 27 rue Maurice Flandin 69003 LYON - Eurl with capital of €50,000 - 04 26 68 81 18 / 06 37 86 73 44 - contact@autographes-des-siecles.com