Manifeste du Surréalisme. Poisson soluble
€1,750.00
The first Manifesto of Surrealism, published together with Poisson soluble, marks a watershed in European letters. Breton sets out, with provocative clarity, a poetics grounded in dream, chance and automatic writing. This trim 12mo from the daring Sagittaire press captures the pulse of avant-garde Paris in 1924. More than a text, it is a founding gesture that redrew the literary map. For collectors, it remains a cornerstone: typographically spare, historically charged, and strikingly alive.
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Breton, André
ILLUSTRATORS
ILLUSTRATORS
ILLUSTRATORS
Manifeste du Surréalisme. Poisson soluble
1924 | Paris | Éditions du Sagittaire (Simon Kra)
A compact, decisive landmark—indispensable to any twentieth-century avant-garde shelf.
The first Manifesto of Surrealism, published together with Poisson soluble, marks a watershed in European letters. Breton sets out, with provocative clarity, a poetics grounded in dream, chance and automatic writing. This trim 12mo from the daring Sagittaire press captures the pulse of avant-garde Paris in 1924. More than a text, it is a founding gesture that redrew the literary map. For collectors, it remains a cornerstone: typographically spare, historically charged, and strikingly alive.
€1,750
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Format
In-12 (Duodecimo) approx. 17 × 22 cm
Print Run
1000
Paper
Papier d’édition
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No inscription
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Product DETAIL
Poisson soluble gathers “automatic” prose-poems that enact the theory of the manifesto. Dream logic, free association and sudden irruptions drive a prose that deliberately fractures continuity. The manifesto defines Surrealism as a stance and a method rather than a style. Together they form a laboratory where language slips the leash of consciousness. The influence radiates beyond poetry into painting, film, and a philosophy of freedom.

Desnos, Robert
La Liberté ou l'Amour !
La Liberté ou l'Amour ! by Robert Desnos is a monument of Surrealist literature, presented here in an exceptional binding by master bookbinder Jean de Gonet. This 1927 edition contains the full text, including the notorious passages censored at the time. The work is a feverish exploration of eroticism and freedom, written in the automatic style that Desnos perfected. The combination of Desnos's rebellious text and De Gonet's industrial, architectural aesthetic makes this copy a unique collector's item. Furthermore, it bears the signature of Czech artist Adolf Hoffmeister, adding to its historical significance. For the bibliophile, this book represents the perfect symbiosis between avant-garde literature and innovative bookbinding art. With its dreamlike logic, unsettling eroticism, and atmosphere of veiled desire, this book can evoke Stanley Kubrick’s film Eyes Wide Shut
Book
€3,200

Michaux, Henri
Choix de poèmes
In Choix de poèmes, Michaux’s poetic trajectory is gathered into a compact, portable compass. This édition originale collective was issued by NRF in 1976; the present copy is from the minute head issue of fifteen on vélin pur fil. Miguet’s sober Havana-morocco binding, with panelled frame, marries elegance to rigor—akin to a voice moving between vision and observation. The selection shows the steady pursuit of inner landscapes and linguistic shock. For bibliophiles, luxury paper, original state and atelier binding make a persuasive triad. Provenance from Jacques Dauchez provides a discreet, eloquent seal.
Book
€700

Michaux, Henri
Poteaux d’angles
In Poteaux d’angles, Henri Michaux returns to compact, probing prose balanced between poem and notebook. Issued by L’Herne in 1971, this copy is from the exceedingly scarce head issue on Hollande paper. Miguet’s raspberry-morocco panelled binding lends a mineral poise that suits Michaux’s angular sentences. The brief pieces act as beacons—jottings, sallies, flashes of insight and refusal. For bibliophiles the trio is ideal: original edition, luxury paper, and a fine atelier binding. The Jacques Dauchez provenance seals its pedigree.
Book
€600

Michaux, Henri
Moments
Moments is a late, compact Michaux volume where language probes time in brief surges and pauses. The grey-buffalo Jansenist binding—by Miguet—frames the spare layout and lets the text’s rhythm breathe. The title points to flashes of consciousness: halts, starts, reprises. As the édition originale in NRF’s “Le Point du Jour” series, the book exemplifies postwar bibliophile exactitude: precise setting, generous white, tactile paper. This copy is from the very small head issue on vergé de Hollande. The binding’s discreet elegance heightens reading focus.




















































