Julien Leclercq (poet)

For the film director, see Julien Leclercq (director).
Julien Leclercq

Julien Leclercq
Born 16 May 1865
Armentières
Died 31 October 1901(1901-10-31) (aged 36)
Paris
Occupation Poet
Art critic

Joseph Louis Julien Leclercq (16 May 1865 – 31 October 1901) was an 19th-century French poet and art critic, devoted to Symbolism. Like his close friend Albert Aurier, he contributed regularly to the Mercure de France, for example in September 1890 an obituary of Vincent van Gogh. In the 1890s, while engaged to the Finnish pianist Fanny Flodin (1868–1954), Leclercq helped to organize exhibitions of contemporary art, the most important touring in 1898 in Scandinavia. Then, in March 1901, he succeeded in bringing together the first important Van Gogh-exhibition exclusively based on loans from French collectors or art dealers, in Paris. It was at this retrospective exhibition hosted by the Bernheim-Jeune Galleries that Paul Cassirer was introduced to the work of Van Gogh.[1]

While preparing a similar Van Gogh-exhibition, now with the support of Johanna van Gogh-Bonger, Leclercq unexpectedly died, October 31, 1901.

Selected works

References

  1. Cynthia Saltzman, p. 9.

Bibliography

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