Yvonne Allendy


Yvonne Allendy was a French women's writer and art critic.

Early Life

She was born Alice Yvonne Nel-Dumouchel in Paris on September 3, 1890. She married René Allendy, a homeopathic doctor on November 19, 1912.

Career

In 1922, she and her husband set up the Groupe d'études philosophiques et scientifiques pour l'examen des idées nouvelles, at the Sorbonne.
Yvonne was the primary benefactor of the Théatre Alfred Jarry, set up by Antonin Artaud, Roger Vitrac and Robert Aron in 1926.
She co-wrote Capitalisme et Sexualité with her husband.
Using the pseudonym of Jacques Poisson, she published several articles discussing the relationship between art and psychoanalysis. In "Littérature moderne et psychoanalysis" she analysed various avant-garde examples of art and literature encompassing the work of Guillaume Apollinaire, Jean Cocteau, Philippe Soupault and Blaise Cendrars. She was greatly interested in cinema, stating this new field should be concern to researchers of the unconscious psychic apparatus, which also dominates drama. She claimed that the cinema introduced the means to clearly reproduce the thought-images in a way that matched their rapidity.

Later Life

Yvonne Allendy died prematurely on 23 Aug 1935, at the age of 44. Her body is buried in the cemetery of Montmartre, in the family vault Dumouchel-Nel.