Alain Tasso

Alain Tasso
Born (1962-07-22) 22 July 1962
Beirut, Lebanon
Occupation Poet
painter
essayist
Language French
Nationality Lebanese-French
Period 20th century
21st century
Notable awards Croix d'or de Jérusalem
Chevalier de l’Ordre Patriarcal de la Sainte Croix de Jérusalem
Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres
Website
www.alaintasso.com

Literature portal

Alain Tasso (born July 22, 1962 in Beirut) is a Lebanese-French poet, painter and essayist. An autodidact, his prolific intense literary work is largely acclaimed by critics. Raphael Jabbour

Biography

Tasso attended high school at the Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais de Beyrouth, but refused to sit for his baccalaureate exam, and decided to study accounting instead. He remained in that field only for a few years.

Grandly interested in antiquities, art objects, classical music, especially sacred baroque music, Tasso, who had started playing the piano at five, opened in 1987 “L’insolite”, an art gallery. He specialized in both Art Nouveau and Oriental art, and began drawing miniatures and calligraphy. Two years later, as the violent conflicts of the Lebanese civil war ravaged the country, he was forced to shut down gallery. He worked between 1992 and 2000 as a freelancer for numerous French and Arabic magazines and daily papers in Beirut, such as L'Orient Le Jour, and published in 1993 a youth poem collection featuring a preface written by the Lebanese poet Said Akl. In 1996, Tasso was promoted Chevalier de l’Ordre Patriarcal de la Sainte Croix de Jérusalem, an eminent Oriental Catholic distinction. In 1998, he participated in a collective exhibition for the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and as of following year, started teachning the postgraduate “Æsthetics” course at the Institut d’études scéniques, audiovisuelles et cinématographiques (IESAV - The Scenic, Audiovisual and Cinematographic Institute) of the Saint Joseph University in Beirut. Later on, he was asked to lecture in several departments of the Faculty of Humanities at the same university (intercultural competence, art history, fine arts, cultural communication. Since 1995, he participated in numerous painting exhibitions, and his art evolved from an abstract Arabic calligraphy to a Sufi style, all the way to a dense and monochromatic black vision.

Calligraphy drawings

In 2001, Tasso founded along with the Lebanese critic Joseph Tarrab “Péristyles”, an artistic and literary publishing outlet at the Saint Joseph University. In 2003, a study on the “Neige écarlate” ranked him with poets Yves Bonnefoy and Paul Celan. Bonnefoy wrote him after reading one of his publications: “Thank you for this beautiful book. Your Intailles[1] makes us think…”.

In 2005 he was promoted to Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government and featured in 2008 in the anthology Poésies de langue française published by Seghers Editions.

Alain Tasso is the author of more than ten poem collections published on fine paper, and illustrated by Tasso himself or with paintings for Raphael, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Van der Weyden (Retables pour des murs en papier, 2001), and Egon Schiele (Sang des neiges et autres poèmes, 2002). He is also the author of several essays on "ethics" as well as on "image and power" in a dehumanized contemporary society (Les fins de l’image, 2009 ; Encore ce peu d’images malgré tout, 2011).

Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 2011

His poetry, mystic at its beginnings (Les lampes d’écume, 1999), started out as expressionism (Fragments chaotiques, 2000; Retables pour des murs en papier, 2001; Sang des neiges et autres poèmes, 2002; Intailles, Te Deum pour un requiem du temps, 2004). Later it became denser, and developed a very pure and literary style which has made Tasso a Poet of the Presence and a much noticed figure of the French poetry (De neige et de pierres, Poèmes pour l’improbable, 2005; Assomption d’une autre saison, 2005; Paysages de flot précédé de Sommeil des Ancolies, 2009; Brisants comme dictame d’un monde trépassé, 2010).

In October 2010, the publishing firm "Les éditions de la Revue Phénicienne" released an anthology entitled Alain Tasso, preceded by eleven studies and critical texts.[2]

In 2000 and in 2011, the bookshop “L’écume des pages”, located in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, in the heart of Paris, offered Tasso its windows for a display of his work.[3]

He started teaching in 2011 at the Lebanese Academy of Fine Arts (Académie libanaise des Beaux-Arts, ALBA). He is also the author of numerous artist books.

The Bibliothèque nationale de France – National Library of France, established in 2011 the Alain Tasso Fonds featuring manuscripts, illuminated collections and ink drawings.

Talking about the Arab Spring

In the frame of the European Parliament in Brussels, Alex Taylor hosted Alain Tasso as the special guest of Euronews “I-Talk” program. Chosen from the Arab World, Tasso gave an interview on the Arab Spring. Recorded in French, and broadcast from July 14 to July 21, 2011 on Euronews international channels, the talk was also dubbed and translated in the ten languages of the channel, namely French, English, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, Russian, Arabic and Persian.[4]

Works

in la Collection Les blés d’or

Signing at the Beirut French Book Fair.

in les éditions de Revue Phénicienne

in les éditions Seghers

in les Éditions Gallimard

Essays

Texts in magazines

References

  1. Intailles, Te deum pour un requiem du temps, a publication by Alain Tasso in 2004, illustrated with his art, in the collection Les blés d'or
  2. Check the French review of L'Orient-Le Jour, http://cllf.wordpress.com/2010/10/23/alain-tasso-lu-vu-et-explique-par-onze-plumes-critiques/ and the one of NOW Lebanon, an Arabic-English website that seldom published in French, http://www.nowlebanon.com/arabic/NewsArchiveDetails.aspx?ID=212220/
  3. http://www.paperblog.fr/4387461/alain-tasso-a-lhonneur-a-lecume-des-pages-paris/
  4. Taylor, Alex (14 July 2011). "Alain Tasso on the Arab Spring". Euronews. Archived from the original on 5 November 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2012.

Further reading

External links

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