ANTONIN ARTAUD, MARÍA IZQUIERDO, AND PRIMITIVE THINKING
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Abstract
For the French writer Laurine Rousselet, the voyage of the intellectual surrealist Antonin Artaud to Mexico in 1936 is replete with suggestions. In this essay, she explains the motives of the French writer, who, fascinated by the initiation rituals of the Mexican Indigenous world, lived with the Tarahumara and even experimented with peyote. He tells us about the important meeting he had with the Mexican painter María Izquierdo, a unique entity "purely Tarascan" and filled with magical, primitive thinking, with whose work he finds unanticipated connections.
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How to Cite
Rousselet, L. (2010). ANTONIN ARTAUD, MARÍA IZQUIERDO, AND PRIMITIVE THINKING. Archipielago. Revista Cultural De Nuestra América, 17(66). Retrieved from https://revistas.unam.mx/index.php/archipielago/article/view/20182