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Claude Jeancolas

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Abubakar Abdul Salam
Born28 february, 1988
Accra Palace Town
OccupationMusician
NationalityGhanain

Claude Jeancolas (June 10, 1949 – February 10, 2016) was a French writer, art historian, and journalist.[1] He is best known for his work on Arthur Rimbaud.[2][3]

Life

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Jeancolas' spent his childhood and adolescence in Nancy, in the east of France.[4] At the age of 16, he left for Paris with his Baccalaureate diploma. There, he continued his studies in a preparatory class for the "grandes écoles", and later entered the École Supérieure de Commerce of Paris (ESCP). He earned a degree from the Business School of the University of Texas where he wrote his thesis on the management of the American press. He was also a visiting scholar at various American universities. He passed away on 17 February 2016.[5]

Journalism career

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Jeancolas began his career as the head of the financial analysis department of the weekly magazine Entreprise. He then founded two management journals: Enseignement et gestion and Revue Française de Gestion. Following that, he became the head of the avant-garde monthly Mode international. He later edited the magazines Collections, Décoration, and Mariages. He moved to Votre Beauté, a magazine that François Mitterrand edited early in his career. Jeancolas then joined the Hachette Group (now the Lagardère Group) as the international editor of Elle.[1] He also created Cousteau Junior and Max. Until 2012, he was the director of Marie Claire maison and Marie Claire travel magazines in Milan.[citation needed]

Art historian career

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His interest in art developed in 1969 after meeting the sculptor Edmond Moirignot, who later became the executor of his will. In 1987, he published a monograph on the sculptor Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux. Following this publication, Jeancolas studied the history of sculpture and French drawing. He later published two books on the Nabis and the Fauves.[citation needed]

Rimbaud

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After quoting Arthur Rimbaud to his professor Izambard in an editorial for Max, Jeancolas received an overwhelming amount of mail, which prompted him to explore the subject further. He continued to study Rimbaud's work and regularly published on the topic. In his view, Rimbaud was too intelligent (he was at the top of his class)[6] to be incoherent. Jeancolas argued that Rimbaud's poems always carried meaning, were coherent, and served a purpose.[citation needed] He also wrote about Une Saison en enfer. Additionally, he attempted to redeem the poet's highly criticized mother, Vitalie Rimbaud, in a biography that alimed to demonstrate the intense love she had for her child and her importance to Rimbaud.

Bibliography

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Main publications:

1985
  • Moirignot. Éditions du St Gothard. Paris
1987
  • Carpeaux peintre et sculpteur. Edita. Lausanne
1991
  • La Sculpture italienne du XXe siècle. Éditions Van Wilder. Paris
  • Les Voyages de Rimbaud. Balland. Paris
  • Le Dictionnaire Rimbaud. Balland. Paris
1993
  • La Sculpture française. Fabbri. Milan
1995
  • Le Dessin en France de la renaissance au XXe siècle. Rizzoli. Milan
1996
  • L'œuvre intégrale manuscrite de Rimbaud. Textuel. Paris
1997
  • Le Don du père. Flammarion. Paris
  • Les Lettres manuscrites de Rimbaud. Textuel. Paris
1998
  • Lettres et poèmes de Rimbaud. L'auberge verte. Paris
  • Une saison en enfer de Rimbaud. Hachette. Paris
  • Passion Rimbaud. Textuel. Paris
1999
  • Poésies de Rimbaud. Éditions mille et une nuits. Paris
  • Rimbaud, la biographie. Flammarion. Paris
  • Venise et ses peintres. Une histoire intime. Éditions Van Wilder. Paris
  • L'Afrique de Rimbaud. Textuel. Paris
2000
  • Rimbaud, l'œuvre. Textuel. Paris
2002
  • La Peinture des Nabis. Éditions fvw. Paris
2004
  • Vitalie Rimbaud, pour l'amour d'un fils. biographie. Flammarion
  • Rimbaud après Rimbaud, anthologie. Textuel. Paris
2005
  • Rimbaud, l'œuvre, la vie. Éditions France Loisirs
2006
  • Les Fauves, couleurs et lumières. Éditions FVW. Paris
  • Moirignot, la vie, l'œuvre, le catalogue raisonné. Éditions FVW. Paris
2007
  • Le regard bleu d'Arthur Rimbaud. Éditions FVW. Paris
2008 in collaboration
  • Fierté de fer with Joël Alessandra et Idriss Youssouf Elmi. Éditions Paquet. Genève
  • L'aube du monde with Thibaut et Pascal Villecroix, Amina Saïd Chiré - FVW. Paris
2008
  • Le Retour à Tadjoura – l'Afrique secrète de Jean-François Deniau – FVW. Paris

Many of those were translated in German, Korean, Japanese and English.

References

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  1. ^ a b Giovannini, Joseph (28 April 1988). "CURRENTS; Decoration Tries a New Accent". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 December 2010.
  2. ^ "A Charleville, Rimbaud puissance 50". L'Union (in French). 8 January 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2010.
  3. ^ "Avec la mort de Claude Jeancolas, Arthur Rimbaud perd un de ses plus grands connaisseurs". lunion. Archived from the original on 19 February 2016.
  4. ^ "Avec la mort de Claude Jeancolas, Arthur Rimbaud perd un de ses plus grands connaisseurs". Journal L'Union (in French). 18 February 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2024.
  5. ^ "Avec la mort de Claude Jeancolas, Arthur Rimbaud perd un de ses plus grands connaisseurs". Lunion.fr. Archived from the original on 19 February 2016. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  6. ^ "Arthur Rimbaud | The Letters (1870-1872)". BLACKOUT ((poetry & politics)). 3 March 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2024.