Louise Varèse


Louise Varèse, also credited as Louise Norton or Louise Norton-Varèse, was an American writer, editor, and translator of French literature who was involved with New York Dadaism.

Early life and education

Varèse was born Louise McCutcheon in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to John Lindsay McCutcheon and Mary Louise Taylor. She attended Smith College, but left in the fall of 1911 to marry Allen Norton.

Career

Varèse founded and edited the modernist magazine Rogue with her then-husband, Allen Norton, from 1915 to 1916. She sometimes wrote under the pseudonym "Dame Rogue". Under this pseudonym, Varèse wrote a fashion column called "Philosophic Fashions". She was also a contributor to the New York Dada magazine The Blind Man.
Varèse met Marcel Duchamp in 1915 and became close friends. She was involved in the 1917 Society of Independent Artists submission of a urinal under the name R.Mutt known as Fountain. She wrote a defense of the work titled "Buddha of the Bathroom" in issue 2 of The Blind Man.
Her address also appears on the label of Fountain as seen in the Alfred Stieglitz photograph of the work and her phone number was given as an alternative to Duchamp's as press contact. As such, she is a likely candidate for the "female friend" Duchamp mentions in a letter dated 11 April 1917 to his sister Suzanne: "Une de mes amies sous un pseudonyme masculin, Richard Mutt, avait envoyé une pissotière en porcelaine comme sculpture".
Varèse translated poetry and other works by Charles Baudelaire, Julien Gracq, Saint-John Perse, Marcel Proust, Arthur Rimbaud, Georges Simenon, and Stendhal. Her translations of the work of Arthur Rimbaud for James Laughlin's New Directions imprint were particularly influential. In 1956, she translated the section "The Great Improvisation" from Adam Mickiewicz's poetic drama Dziady.
She played an important role in the International Composers' Guild, and included material about this organisation in her book Varèse; a looking-glass diary.
In 1972, she wrote a biography of her late second husband, Edgard Varèse, titled: Varèse: A Looking-Glass Diary. For the exhibition Marcel Duchamp at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1973, Varèse wrote an essay titled "Marcel Duchamp at Play".

Personal life

Her first husband was poet and literary editor Allen Norton, the couple had a son, Michael in 1912, separated in 1916, and divorced in 1920. Louise also had a granddaughter, Sylvia Calderwood.
In 1922 she married composer Edgard Varèse; they remained together until his death in 1965.

Death

Varèse died on July 1, 1989, at the age of 98 in Eugene, Oregon.

Awards

Fiction

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Nonfiction

Translations