Sonia Delaunay

La Prose du Transsibérien et de la Petite Jehanne de France (Prose of the Trans-Siberian and of Little Joan of France)

1913

Accordion-format book with pochoir illustrations, letterpress text, and inscriptions in colored ink and pencil; hand-painted parchment wrapper

Not on view

To create a work appropriate to the dynamism of modern life, Delaunay transformed the traditional book into an object that unfolds accordion style, to be seen all at once. Her collaborator Cendrars’s poem narrates an epic, mostly imaginary journey on the Trans-Siberian Railway with a young French prostitute, “little Jehanne” (a name invoking Joan of Arc, patron saint of France). They travel from Moscow to Siberia, China, the North Pole, and Paris, suggested by the Eiffel Tower, a symbol of early modernity, at bottom left. When the work is folded up, it tucks into a parchment cover hand-painted by Delaunay.

Gallery label from

2019

Publication excerpt from MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)

Delaunay and her collaborator Blaise Cendrars, a modernist poet, called this “the first simultaneous book.” This reference to Simultanism, a new movement that the artist and her husband Robert Delaunay were pioneering in Paris, connected the work’s visual impact to the thrilling simultaneity of modern life—the fast-paced, consciousness-altering dynamism brought about by innovations in transportation and communication. Delaunay and Cendrars transformed the traditional book format from a handheld volume that is read sequentially from page to page into an object that unfolds accordion-style—a dazzlingly colorful, nearly seven-foot-long sheet on which text and illustration can be apprehended all at once. While Cendrars’s poem appears on the right, in various typefaces and colors, Delaunay’s geometries cascade down the left, and the blank spaces around the text have been stenciled with color as well.

Using flashbacks and flash-forwards that upend conventional notions of time and space, Cendrars’s poem narrates an epic, mostly imaginary journey on the Trans-Siberian Railroad that he takes with a young French prostitute, the “little Joan” of the title. Their train travels from Moscow to Siberia, China, the North Pole, and, finally, Paris, which is suggested by the motif of the Eiffel Tower—itself a famous symbol of modernity at the time—at bottom left. When the work is folded up, like a map, it tucks into a small parchment cover hand-painted by Delaunay.

Author Blaise Cendrars (Frédéric Sauser)
Medium Accordion-format book with pochoir illustrations, letterpress text, and inscriptions in colored ink and pencil; hand-painted parchment wrapper
Dimensions page (unfolded): 77 1/2 × 14" (196.9 × 35.6 cm); overall (closed): 7 1/4 × 4 1/8 × 5/8" (18.4 × 10.5 × 1.6 cm)
Publisher Éditions des Hommes Nouveaux, Paris
Printer Imprimerie Crété, Paris
Edition 150 announced; at least 110 produced
Credit Acquired through the generosity of Marlene Hess and James D. Zirin, Kathy and Richard S. Fuld, Jr., Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis, Jerry I. Speyer and Katherine Farley, Glenn and Amanda Fuhrman, Ralph Goldenberg and Anna Barbagallo, and the Committee on Drawings and Prints Fund, in honor of Donald B. Marron
Object number 173.2018
Department Drawings and Prints

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Sonia Delaunay

Sonia Delaunay

French, born Ukraine. 1885–1979 52 works online

Red and green, blue and orange, yellow and violet: these color combinations were vital to the artistic practice and theory of Sonia Delaunay, whose vast body of work—paintings and drawings, prints and illustrations, textiles and furnishings, clothing and accessories—enthralled its earliest viewers, users, and wearers.

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