Utilisatrice:AstridC4/Brouillon

Marie Krysinska modifier

Marie Krysinska

Marie Krysinska (née Maria Anastazja Wincentyna Krysinska) is a French poet of Polish origin. She was born in Warsaw on January 22, 1857 and died on January 16, 1908 in Paris. Krysinska was highly involved with artistic and literary movements of her time, participating in creative groups such as the "Hirsutes", the "Jemenfoutistes", the "Zutistes", and "les Hydropathes" (of which she was the sole female member), and playing piano as the famous Parisian cabaret, Le chat noir.[1]

Biography modifier

Marie Krysinka is the daughter of a Polish lawyer, Ksawery Jan Teodor Krysiński de Leliwa, and the grand-daughter of the Polish politican and economist, Dominik Krysiński. At the age of sixteen she left Poland to pursue an education in music, however shortly after her arrival she abandoned her formal education in favor of participation in the literary and artistic scene of Paris at the time.[1]

Work modifier

  • L'Amour chemine, Lemerre, 1892
  • Rythmes pittoresques : mirages, symboles, femmes, contes, résurrections, Lemerre, 1890.
  • Joies errantes : nouveaux rythmes pittoresques, Lemerre, 1894
  • Intermèdes, nouveaux rythmes pittoresques : pentéliques, guitares lointaines, chansons et légendes, Messein, 1903
  • La Force du désir, roman, Mercure de France, 1905
  1. a et b Krysinska, Marie, 1857-1908., Rythmes pittoresques, University of Exeter Press, (ISBN 9780859897112, OCLC 48572477, lire en ligne)

Catégorie:Symbolisme (art)