1. Introduction
French artist Camille Bryen (1907–1977) is usually, and always briefly, cited as a member of the lyrical post-Second World War (1939–1945) abstraction trend in Paris. In his drawings, paintings, and etchings, Bryen figured hybrids of plants and animals, and mingled the organic with the inorganic; his paintings evoke cellular agglomerations and/or geological structures, and prehistorical abstract signs. Materiality and process are emphasized through thick impasto, visible brushstrokes, and automatism. According to the traditional interpretation framework of the post-war Parisian abstraction, these formal characteristics are a mix of a dramatic existential anguish and existentialist humanism. In other words, they are a logical reaction to the horrors of the Second World War (1939–1945) and the Holocaust, but also the affirmation of the infinite faith in the spiritual capacity of humans, embodied in innovative formal propositions, to overcome such plights thanks to the power of art (
De Chassey and Ramond 2008, pp. 19–32).
If this could correspond to the production of some post-war abstractionists, it certainly does not match Bryen’s. First, this was not the way he himself approached his art, and art in general. Second, if we scrutinize his work in its totality—his abstract paintings, actions, installations, objects, photographs, poems, and objects—we will quickly understand that his rejection of any pretension toward spirituality, universalism, and humanism, and his biting critique, do not linger over anguish, even though he was probably not exempted from the syndrome of post-war anxiety. This is, at least, what his still largely understudied theoretical writings on “Abhumanism” are telling us. Elaborated together with his close friend, the playwright, writer, and occasional draughtsman Jacques Audiberti (1899–1965), who coined the term at the end of the 1940s, Abhumanism claimed that when faced with the rawness and cruelty of recent history, the lyrical humanism in art was merely fallacious. They called for a radical revision of the humanist subject, including anthropocentrism, convinced that the deflation of the humanist pretension would lead to a renewed vitalism. As we will see, Audiberti affirmed repeatedly that painting was the abhumanist activity par excellence, and that Bryen was the best example he could think of.
The historical obliteration of Abhumanism, and other “minor” trends in the post-war Parisian arts scene, has been systematic and has contributed to the canonical vision of the “decline” of Paris after the Second World War, directly linked to the narrative of the rise and fall of lyrical abstraction itself (
Giroud 2008, pp. 6–8;
Flahutez 2011, pp. 23–35;
Slavkova 2021, pp. 90–97), and the subsequent “triumph” of American art (
Dossin 2014). Bryen was somehow trapped in these narratives—one of the most popular figures of the post-war Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood in Paris around the Second World War (
Camille Bryen 1997, pp. 163–64), he was almost totally forgotten when the art world made a shift from abstraction to more objective art forms (Pop Art, Neo-Dada, Nouveau Réalisme, Figuration Narrative, etc.) in the 1960s. Since then, his work has remained understudied and undervalued. In currently available scholarship, this is the first consistent study on Bryen in English.
1 It will approach Bryen’s work through the lens of Abhumanism, connecting Bryen more largely to the history of the avant-garde (mostly Dada and also Surrealism), and pointing to the relevance of Abhumanism as a prolongation of the reflection of the avant-garde on the crisis of humanism generated by the First World War (1914–1918), and confirmed by the second world conflict. More generally, the paper will contribute to the ongoing reappraisal of the artistic life in Paris after the Second World War, assigning more attention to some understudied trends that attest to the vitality and pertinence of the European avant-garde after the catastrophe.
2. Results: Who Is Camille Bryen?
Given the relative oblivion of Bryen and the difficulty to find information about him in any other language than French, it is essential to provide some biographical information. Born in Nantes in 1907, Camille Briand (his real name) moved to Paris sometime in 1929–1930 (
Camille Bryen 1997, pp. 161–65). Already known in the bohemian avant-garde poetic circles in Nantes, he settled in Montparnasse, then in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, and quickly became a well-known socialite whose company and humor were appreciated. His first one-man show took place in May 1934 at the independent Le Grenier venue in the Latin Quarter, and featured Surrealism-inspired automatic drawings. It was followed by another exhibition in 1935, showing also automatic drawings, alongside the Swedish Surrealist Erik Olson (1901–1986) at the gallery Gravitations (
Figure 1). The invitation for the opening on June 18 demonstrates the strong the impact of Surrealism on both artists. Olsen’s desertic dreamlike landscape with biomorphic shapes recalls Yves Tanguy; the hybrid unarticulated and highly eroticized hermaphrodite drawn by Bryen takes its cues from the Surrealist game
cadavre exquis [exquisite corpse].
Before the Second World War, Bryen displayed drawings at the Salon des Surindépendants in 1935, 1936, and 1938. He associated with independent venues such as the gallery La Fenêtre ouverte (February 1937) and the bar La Cachette (March 1937), where his works were shown alongside with those of Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968) and Francis Picabia (1789–1953) (
Camille Bryen 1997, p. 169). In 1935, Bryen’s drawings were included in the first surrealist exhibition in Belgium, at the municipality of La Louvière, his first international exploit (
Canonne 2012). As art historian Gaëlle Rageot has explained, his early drawings were purported to be destroyed but many of them reappeared in the “Bryen Fund” when it was given to the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nantes (
Rageot 1997, p. 78). Similar to the drawing reproduced on the Gravitations flyer, most of them represent incomplete, monstruous hybrids. Playing with the kingdoms of nature and subverting the hierarchy of the species, his drawings recall, as mentioned earlier, the surrealist “exquisite corpses”—figures whose sections are drawn blindly by different persons resulting in disquieting, bizarre figures. Bryen worked mostly with ink and pencil on paper, an easily transportable medium that allowed him to work everywhere. In some cases, he used headed paper from bars, such as the famous Montparnasse brasserie Le Dôme in Paris (
Camille Bryen 1997, p. 87). Very probably, many of his spontaneous-looking drawings were improvised in those establishments.
In parallel to these Surrealism-inspired drawings, Bryen wrote poetry, made objects and artists’ books, and gave extravagant conferences. For instance, on 6 April 1938, he gave a conference organized by the esoteric society “Groupe universaliste d’études traditionnelles” (Universalist group for traditional studies) with the ironic title “The occult without the occult” (
Bryen Archives BRY n.d.,
Figure 2). In the poster, he qualified himself as an “illuminated by the Greek breasts”
2, a pun on the homonymy of the French words
sein (breast) and
saint (saint), relating implicitly the sacred and the erotic, revealing another surrealist thread.
Bryen’s best known and most ambitious projects before World War II were collaborations with the photographer Raoul Michelet (known as Ubac, 1910–1985), who was then close to the Surrealists. Their first joint project, the book
Actuation poétique (Poetic Actuation), called for an “actualized” poetry interacting with life. The authors wrote that they wanted to create “poetic public actions that require the actuation of poetry” (
Bryen and Michelet 1935, p. 6), and added that “the poetic activity must participate in the life of the city like an anarchistic and disturbing ferment, profoundly amoral and in a state of permanent insurrection”. Their second project,
L’Aventure des objets (The Adventure of the Objects, 1937), was the result of a conference Bryen gave at the Sorbonne, in which he took critical distance from the objects he had produced in the previous years (
Bryen 1937). Like Marcel Duchamp’s ready-mades and the surrealist objects of symbolic functioning, Bryen’s assemblages made irruption into the quotidian flow, emphasizing the erotic and the marvellous potential of banal objects and places. This is evidenced in one of the book’s best-known photographs—a breast grown on a tree, offering a spoon to the spectator—which will be analyzed in more depth later (
Figure 3).
During the war years, Bryen fled Paris and his traces lead to Nantes, Bordeaux, and Lyons. He reached Marseilles where many avant-garde artists, namely a group of Surrealists, were hiding from the Vichy government; some of them, such as André Breton, Max Ernst, and Hans Bellmer, as well as his close friend Wols, applied more or less successfully for an exceptional visa for the United States through Varian Fry’s Emergency Rescue Committee (
Varian Fry 1999;
Slavkova 2020a). Bryen returned to Paris in April 1945 and became once again one of the most popular personalities of the effervescent Saint-Germain-des-Prés. A painting by the designer, architect, and filmmaker Georges Patrix (1920–1992) shows him as one of the “glories of the 6th arrondissement” next to Jean-Paul Sartre, Juliette Gréco, and Jacques Prévert (image published in
Camille Bryen 1997, p. 159). Bryen is recognizable through his skinny, almost childish silhouette and his large smiling face adorned by prominent circular glasses. After the war, Bryen regularly exhibited his drawings, watercolors, and engravings and continued writing and publishing poems. He started painting with oils in 1949, producing works that intermingled the kingdoms of nature once again. Contrary to the automatic drawings from the 1930s, however, these paintings were more overtly abstract; yet, some motifs could recall insects, plants, and even humans, like in
Hépérile discussed further below (
Figure 4).
In the decade after the Liberation of France, Bryen affirmed himself as a central figure in the Parisian avant-garde. He was, according to Michel Giroud, completely “decentralized”, i.e., open-minded enough to bridge the conflicting trends coexisting in the city at the time: geometric and lyrical abstractionists, late Dada followers, Surrealists, Lettrists, and
Zaoum sound poetry (
Giroud 2008, p. 45/note 1). In the 1940s and 1950s, he took part in the epoch-making exhibitions of abstract painting in Paris: “L’Imaginaire” at the Luxembourg Gallery in December 1947, H.W.P.S.M.T.B at Collette Allendy in 1948, the now mythical “Véhémences confrontées” at Nina Dausset in 1951, which introduced Jackson Pollock to the French audience, and “Signifiants de l’Informel” organized by Michel Tapié at Studio Facchetti in 1952.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Bryen was honored by several institutional exhibitions, namely a one-man show at the Musée national d’Art moderne/Centre Pompidou in 1973 (
Camille Bryen 1997, pp. 183–84). Philosopher and intellectual Umberto Eco considered his work to be a singular example of the Parisian post-war Informel (
Eco 1965, p. 117). In 1976, the year before his death, Bryen was interviewed by Michel Butor for the influential among the intelligentsia French radio station “France Culture”; an innovative writer, Butor was a prominent representative of the Nouveau Roman trend. Art historian Jacqueline Boutet-Loyer established the
catalogue raisonné of Bryen’s paintings in 1986, providing useful documentation on the works and the artist, based on archival research and conversations with Bryen and his wife Louysette (
Boutet-Loyer 1986). More recently, the acquisition of Bryen’s archives by the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nantes, the dedicated work of Vincent Rousseau (former curator of this museum), and Émilie Guillard, who runs the Fondation Bryen (Bryen Foundation), led to the major retrospective
Camille Bryen à revers (which could be translated as “Bryen upside down”) in 1997 in Nantes (
Camille Bryen 1997) and the digitalization of the archive documents accessible through the Fondation Camille Bryen/Fondation de France.
3 In 2007, Guillard edited the complete writings of Bryen, published at the Presses du réel (Dijon) in the collection “L’Écart absolu” created by Michel Giroud (
Bryen 2007). Despite these honors, Bryen, as he put it himself, has remained the “best-known of the unknown” (
Clair 1971, p. 15).
3. Material and Methods: Bryen and Parisian Abstraction
Bryen is usually associated with the post-Second World War Parisian lyrical abstraction, often referred to generically as the “New School of Paris”, or often shortly as the “School of Paris”. It is important to define his place within Parisian abstraction because, as we will see, the context in Paris was rather conflictual and the designations could be misleading. From the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, Bryen’s work was qualified as “tachiste” or “lyrical abstraction”, or yet “informel”, terms associated, as mentioned above, with the rather vague School of Paris, which could be very confusing, given that there had already been quite a distinct School of Paris in the period between the wars (
Adamson 2009, pp. 2–3). What was considered typical of all these abstract painters were the irregular, organic shapes, the bold gestural lines emphasizing the materiality of the pictorial surfaces. It felt natural to associate these characteristics with the state of post-war depression and the impossibility to represent the horrors of the Holocaust. But there was also a supposedly positive aspect to it—national pride. As art historian Natalie Adamson has argued, this formal language based on gestural brushstrokes, blotchy impasto-charged surfaces, freehand composition, and impassioned coloration was seen as a universal and noble poetic expression, which contributed to the restoration of the humanist values in France, and the revival of Paris as the art capital of the world (
Adamson 2009, pp. 7–9). There was a kind of a “race for humanism” when art was appropriated for political purposes. The champions of abstraction, associated broadly with Gaullism, were opposed to those of Realism and figuration, linked to the French Communist Party; both claimed to be the safekeepers of the universal humanism inherent to French tradition and the Enlightenment (
Adamson 2009, pp. 11, 116–17, 143–50, 172). Between the two, Bernard Dorival, an influential art historian and the first director of the newly founded Musée national d’Art moderne in Paris, affirmed that the current French art was the most valid heir to the values of Western humanist painting since the Renaissance (
Dorival 1946, pp. 323–24). This idea was supported by many French intellectuals across the political spectre. A defender of traditional Catholic values, writer Georges Bernanos (1888–1948) declared in 1948 on the front page of the Gaullist newspaper
Carrefour that “France will be tomorrow, like never before, the head and the heart of a renewed Humanity” (
Bernanos 1948, p. 1). The belief that France was the homeland of humanism was not new. During the First World War, many French intellectuals had associated their country with the defence of universal humanist values against German savagery and barbarism; to them, fighting for these values could justify the necessity of the conflict and even its violence (
Slavkova 2020b, pp. 77–84).
How did Bryen fit into this? Bryen was indeed one of the pioneers of lyrical abstraction in Paris, launched by the exhibition “L’Imaginaire” in 1947, first entitled “Vers l’Abstraction lyrique” (Towards Lyrical Abstraction,
Camille Bryen 1997, p. 173). Bryen initiated the show together with the gestural abstract painter Georges Mathieu (1921–2012) with the goal of countering geometrical abstraction, which they deemed too cold and dogmatic. The two men exhibited side by side with artists who would become the cornerstones of Parisian abstraction: Jean-Michel Atlan (1913–1960), Jean-Marc Riopelle (1923–2002), and Wols (Otto Wolfgang Schulze, 1913–1951). Notwithstanding, Bryen’s place within the abstract scene is quite ambivalent. If we take two major figures of the period, art critic and theoretician Charles Estienne (1908–1968) and art critic, writer, and curator Michel Tapié (1919–1987), we will see that their attitude toward Bryen is rather evasive. Charles Estienne, who became the champion of Tachisme, as well as of l’Ecole de Paris, used extensively the term “lyrical abstraction”, without including Bryen in the inaugural show of the New School of Paris, as he called, at the Salon d’Octobre of 1952 (
Musée des Beaux-Arts and Duvillier 2011, pp. 159–60). Originating in the word “tache” [stain], “Tachisme” was an ironic designation for lyrical abstraction that Estienne appropriated to give a more specific identity to his New School of Paris (
Ragon 2001, p. 63). In 1954, Estienne vaguely reproached to Bryen not to seek beauty in the act of painting, contrary to the artists he was defending (
Estienne 1984, p. 9). Yet, Bryen was perceived by some, such as the influential critic and champion of lyrical abstraction Julien Alvard, as a member, or even the initiator, of the School of Paris and Tachisme (
Alvard 1955, p. 12).
As for Michel Tapié, he did include Bryen in his book
Un art autre, the manifesto of what was referred to as “Informel” (
Tapié 1994). For many exegetes, Bryen was the father of Informel. Thus, in his book
L’Art informel, the influential critic and writer, and director of the
Nouvelle Revue Française, Jean Paulhan (1884–1968), stated that “Informel” was invented in homage to Bryen (
Paulhan 1962, p. 20). Bryen specialist Jacqueline Boutet-Kapéta confirms that the definition of Informel has been frequently used in relation with the artist, and that the formal qualities of his art match this trend (
Boutet-Kapéta 1997, pp. 109–110). However, the definition of Infomel is broad and vague, ranging from Jean Dubuffet (1901–1989) and Hans Hartung (1904–1989) to Etienne-Martin (1913–1995) and Victor Brauner (1903–1966). If Tapié emphasized the role of Jean Dubuffet or Georges Mathieu, he mentioned Bryen only twice, and quite briefly: first, in relation to the exhibition “Signifiants de l’Informel” in 1952, and second, in comparison with Hartung and Wols (
Tapié 1994, np). Two early paintings—
Hépérile (1951,
Figure 4) and
Tellurie (1952,
Figure 5) are reproduced in
Un art autre.
Despite the relative vagueness of Tapié’s theory, his emphasis on Nietzschean impulse, on the rawness and inhumanity of art (the book opens on this affirmation) stood against the lyrical outpourings of his contemporaries, which were impregnated with even vaguer humanism (
Tapié 1994, unpaginated). The hostilities, quarrels, and often artificial frontiers between the different Parisian abstract or semi-abstract trends at the time were notorious: if these groups were united in their fight against geometric abstraction and figuration, they nonetheless attacked each other viciously whenever the opportunity arose (
Adamson 2009, pp. 163–204).
Limiting Bryen’s art to any of these tendencies is pointless. In one of the rare in-depth studies on Parisian abstraction in English, Natalie Adamson mentions Bryen only three time (
Adamson 2009, pp. 174, 181, 191), virtually excluding him, and rightfully so, from the scope of the Ecole de Paris. The relative impossibility of classifying him is confirmed by other art historians. In her book
Après la guerre, for instance, Laurence Bertrand-Dorléac mentions briefly Bryen as a Neo-dadaist (
Bertrand-Dorléac 2010, p. 65). On the other hand, Fabrice Flahutez points to the close relationship between Bryen and phonetic poetry circles around Iliazd, Ilia Zdanevich (1894–1975) (
Flahutez 2011, pp. 106–8, 161–63). As we have seen, according to Michel Giroud, Bryen is, along with Marcel Duchamp, Hans Arp (1866–1986), Antonin Artaud (1896–1948), and Jean Dubuffet, one of the “transformative singularities who didn’t want to impose themselves as a model” (
Giroud 2008, p. 6). Giroud also emphasizes the various collaborations between Bryen and all kinds of artists, namely the future Nouveaux Réalistes Raymond Hains (1926–2005), Jacques Villeglé (b. 1926), and François Dufrêne (1930–1982) (Giroud, 45/note 1
4). It is then unsurprising that Pierre Restany, the founder and theoretician of the Nouveau Réalisme movement—which rejects lyrical abstraction and shares some characteristics with Pop Art—was one of Bryen’s champions (
Bryen Archives FF n.d., pp. 217–11)
5. Indeed, if at first glance Bryen’s paintings fit formally in lyrical abstraction, the totality of his production does not. In
Bryen abhomme, Daniel Abadie even hesitated to call Bryen an abstract painter and labelled him
viveur du réel (one who lives the real), stressing the material presence of his œuvre (
Abadie 1973, p. 15). He stated that, unlike the dominant discourse on abstraction, Bryen’s work is determined by the urgency of making; the forms produced are a
décantation du réel (distillation of the real) rejecting the poeticization or the mythologization of the act of painting (
Abadie 1973, p. 8).