Tristan Klingsor


Tristan Klingsor, birth name Léon Leclère, was a French poet, musician, painter and art critic, best known for his artistic association with the composer Maurice Ravel.
His pseudonym, combining the names of Wagner's hero Tristan and his villain Klingsor, indicates one aspect of his artistic interests, though he said that he chose the names because he liked the "sounds" they made, the associations with Arthurian and Breton legends he had read as a child, and that there were already too many literary men in Paris with the surname Leclère. Some of his "orientalist" poems are addressed to a mysterious "jeune étranger," possibly symbolising his gay orientation, although he did marry in 1903, and had a daughter two years later. His first collection, Filles-fleurs, was in eleven-syllable verse. After this he often used a personal form of free verse. He was a member of the group of French poets. Certain of his poems were set to music by composers including Charles Koechlin, Georges Hüe and Georges Migot, and he is best remembered as providing the texts for Ravel’s song cycle Shéhérazade. He and Ravel belonged to the Paris avant-garde artistic group known as Les Apaches for whose meetings he was sometimes the host. He recorded his long acquaintance with the composer in an essay, "L'Époque Ravel". Ravel dedicated the first of his Trois Chansons to him in 1915.
Klingsor was also a painter. His visual art was reviewed twice by Guillaume Apollinaire: In 1906, he called Klingsor's attempts "Merde!" but in 1908, he was kinder, stating: "Klingsor animates his painting with the same sentimental delicacy that gives his poetry its somewhat contrived, dated charm. For my part, I prefer the poet to the painter.” He was also the author of several studies on art, and a composer in his own right, with several collections of melodies, four-part songs, and piano music.

List of writings

Filles-Fleurs, poems, Mercure de France, 1895Squelettes fleuris, poems, Mercure de France, 1897L’Escarpolette, poems, Mercure de France, 1899La Jalousie du Vizir, story, Mercure de France, 1899Le Livre d'Esquisses, poems, Mercure de France, 1900Schéhérazade, poems, Mercure de France, 1903Petits métiers des rues de Paris, prose, 1904La Duègne apprivoisée, comedy, 1907Le Valet de Cœur, poems, Mercure de France, 1908Les caprices de Goya, critical essay, 1909Les Femmes de théâtre au XVIIIe siècle, 1911Poèmes de Bohème, poems, Mercure de France, 1913Hubert Robert et les paysagistes français du XVIIIe siècle, 1913Les derniers-états des lettres et des arts : la peinture, 1913Chroniques du Chaperon et de la Braguette, poems, 1913La Peinture , Rieder, Paris, 1921Humoresques, poems, 1921L'Escarbille d'or, poems, Chiberre, Paris, 1922La Peinture , Rieder, Paris, 1922Cézanne, Rieder, Paris, 1923Chardin, collection Maîtres Anciens et Modernes, Nilsson, Paris, 1924Essai sur le chapeau, Les Cahiers de Paris, 1926Léonard de Vinci, Rieder, Paris, 1930Poèmes du Brugnon, 1933Mesures pour rien, in Poésie 42, 1942Cinquante Sonnets du Dormeur éveillé, 1949Florilège poétique, poems selected by Georges Bouquet and Pierre Menanteau, L’Amitié par le livre, Blainville-sur-Mer, 1955Album, 1955Claude Lepape, 1958Le Tambour voilé, Mercure de France, 1960Second florilège, with illustrations by the poet, 1964Maisons Aloysius, 1964L’Art de peindre, collection Initiations, Braun, ParisPoèmes de la princesse Chou, 1974