Oukiva Trene Sebot
€1,200.00
A pataphysical gem from the Collège de ’Pataphysique in which Jean Dubuffet, as Jandu Bufe, cheerfully derails logic. The first edition is richly illustrated: five full-page drawings by Dubuffet and four violet-printed portraits of the author by Pierre Bettencourt. The small 16mo gains bibliophile poise in a Miguet binding—black morocco, balsa boards. Tense line, forthright typography, and a playful colophon make a volatile mix. An exemplary meeting of art brut energy and pataphysical wit.
Quantity
Dubuffet, Jean
Bettencourt, Pierre
Oukiva Trene Sebot
1958 | Paris | Collège de ’Pataphysique
A sparkling pataphysical head copy where every mark counts; crisply bound and convincingly rare.
A pataphysical gem from the Collège de ’Pataphysique in which Jean Dubuffet, as Jandu Bufe, cheerfully derails logic. The first edition is richly illustrated: five full-page drawings by Dubuffet and four violet-printed portraits of the author by Pierre Bettencourt. The small 16mo gains bibliophile poise in a Miguet binding—black morocco, balsa boards. Tense line, forthright typography, and a playful colophon make a volatile mix. An exemplary meeting of art brut energy and pataphysical wit.
€1,200
Condition Report:
In-Depth Study
References & Bibliography
Format
Oblong approx. 12 x 14 cm
Edition Particulars
One of 122 head copies on “gris bouille” paper; with 4 violet portraits by Pierre Bettencourt and 5 full-page drawings by Jean Dubuffet.
Print Run
555
Paper
papier « gris bouille »
Inscription
No inscription
1
Edition Particulars:
We welcome private inquiries, collaborations with institutions, and acquisition requests. Each message is treated with discretion and respect. We welcome private inquiries, collaborations with institutions, and acquisition requests.
1
Print Run:
Condition Report:
1
Copy Number:
Condition Report:
1
Paper:
Condition Report:
1
Signed:
Condition Report:
Product DETAIL
Fragmentary, parodic texts alternate with drawings: lines as traces, words as traps. The four violet portraits reprise the author’s mask and pace the reading. It reads like a notebook that makes rules only to reverse them—light, biting, full of breathing whites.

Reverdy, Pierre · Braque, Georges
Une aventure méthodique
*Une aventure méthodique* brings together Pierre Reverdy’s concentrated poetic prose and Georges Braque’s austere visual language. It belongs among the major post-war French livres d’artiste, where text, lithography and typography meet as equal forces. Braque contributed 27 original lithographs, supplemented by colour reproductions after his paintings, giving the volume both intimacy and monumentality. Printed by Mourlot, the celebrated Paris lithographic workshop, the book has exceptional technical refinement. This copy, on vélin d’Arches and signed by both author and artist, preserves a rare encounter between modern poetry and pictorial invention.
Ill Book
€4,850

Roy, Claude · Picasso, Pablo
La guerre et la paix
*La guerre et la paix*, published in 1954, is a monumental overview of Pablo Picasso's work for the Vallauris chapel, accompanied by Claude Roy's text. This edition by Cercle d’Art forms an essential synthesis of Picasso’s post-war humanism and his resistance to the horrors of conflict. The book contains, alongside numerous reproductions, original lithographs that expose the dynamics of his artistic process. For the bibliophile, this work is a crucial testimony to the dialogue between word and image in the early 1950s.
Ill Book
€850

Suarès, André
Hélène chez Archimède
Hélène chez Archimède is a remarkable example of the collaboration between a poet and a visual artist, in this case the French author André Suarès and the legendary Spanish master Pablo Picasso. The edition, illustrated with wood engravings, reveals the complex interplay between word and image that culminated in the production of illustrated books in the mid-20th century. This work, originally a project by the famous art dealer Ambroise Vollard, shows the enduring relevance of classical themes, here the myth of Helen, in a modernist context. Thanks to its careful execution and the exclusivity of its print run, Hélène chez Archimède is not only a literary work but also an art object, a testament to the artisanal perfection sought by the Nouveau Cercle parisien du Livre. It represents a significant moment in the history of the modern illustrated book, where the line between illustration and autonomous art blurs. The additions to this copy, such as a menu and an announcement leaflet, enrich its bibliographic and historical value and offer a rare glimpse into its publication context.
Ill Book
€3,500

Boudaille, Georges · Bitran, Albert
Bitran. L’Atelier
*Bitran. L’Atelier* is a refined bibliophile artist’s publication devoted to Albert Bitran’s studio world, introduced by the critic Georges Boudaille. It brings together text, image, and object in the spirit of the post-war livre d’artiste: not merely as a monograph, but as a tactile approach to the artist’s working space. The folio format and portfolio presentation give it the character of a studio dossier rather than an ordinary book. This copy is one of only fifteen deluxe copies printed on mould-made Arches vellum. Bitran’s signed presentation inscription to Bernard Gheerbrandt, enhanced with a small original drawing, makes it a remarkable association copy.

























































































