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Journal

2015 | 7 | 25-43

Article title

Dandys, esthètes et névropathes: Drogués d'art dans le sillage de Baudelaire (1880-1900)

Content

Title variants

EN
Dandies, beauty seekers and art maniacs : Art addiction in the post-Baudelairian generation (1880-1900)
PL
Dandys, esthètes et névropathes: Drogués d'art dans le sillage de Baudelaire (1880-1900)

Languages of publication

FR

Abstracts

EN
The late-nineteenth century dandy is, by his own avowal, a cliché blending different influences, amongst which Baudelaire might be seen as a determinant character in building up the aesthete’s identity. As a means of healing or of self-destruction, drugs appear not only as another accessory in the dandy's panoply, but as a path to reach the hidden side of the self. Through painting as much as through writing, artists such as Jean Lorrain and Jeanne Jacquemin struggle to define the dreams and nightmares they fear and yearn for and, above all, yearn to draw the picture of what they fail to know in themselves. Moreover, through the Idealist and Symbolist movements, this addictive artistic struggle to define the unknown tries to give shape, through a renewed language, to shapeless and immaterial thoughts and fantasies, thus announcing the experimental creativity of Surrealism.
PL
The late-nineteenth century dandy is, by his own avowal, a cliché blending different influences, amongst which Baudelaire might be seen as a determinant character in building up the aesthete’s identity. As a means of healing or of self-destruction, drugs appear not only as another accessory in the dandy's panoply, but as a path to reach the hidden side of the self. Through painting as much as through writing, artists such as Jean Lorrain and Jeanne Jacquemin struggle to define the dreams and nightmares they fear and yearn for and, above all, yearn to draw the picture of what they fail to know in themselves. Moreover, through the Idealist and Symbolist movements, this addictive artistic struggle to define the unknown tries to give shape, through a renewed language, to shapeless and immaterial thoughts and fantasies, thus announcing the experimental creativity of Surrealism.

Keywords

Journal

Year

Issue

7

Pages

25-43

Physical description

Dates

published
2015-01-01

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-2353-8953-year-2015-issue-7-article-1106
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