Arts & Culture

Paul van Ostaijen

Flemish writer
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Born:
Feb. 22, 1896, Antwerp, Belg.
Died:
March 18, 1928, Anthée (aged 32)
Movement / Style:
Dada
Expressionism

Paul van Ostaijen (born Feb. 22, 1896, Antwerp, Belg.—died March 18, 1928, Anthée) was a Flemish man of letters whose avant-garde Expressionist poetry and writings on literature and art were influential in Belgium and the Netherlands.

While working as a municipal clerk from 1914 to 1918, van Ostaijen began to contribute poetry to newspapers and periodicals. His first volume of verse, Music-Hall (1916), introduced modern city life as a subject for Flemish poetry. His second, the humanitarian Het sienjaal (1918; “The Signal”), showed the influence of World War I and German Expressionism and inspired other Expressionist writers in Flanders. A political activist, van Ostaijen went into exile in Berlin from 1918 to 1921. The political and artistic climate there and the hardships he endured caused a spiritual crisis that led him to write nihilistic Dadaist poetry, such as that in Bezette stad (1921; “Occupied City”). After his return to Flanders, van Ostaijen worked in the book trade and became an art dealer in Brussels (1925–26). Striving to achieve a “pure poetry” that transcended the subjective, van Ostaijen soon developed a poetic system of his own. He set out this principle in the profound essay Gebruiksaanwijzing der lyriek (1927; “Lyrical Poetry: Directions for Use”) and embodied it in Gedichten (1928; “Poems”), a collection of evocative fragments of exceptional sensibility and haunting musicality that represents his best and most original poems.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) only confirmed photograph of Emily Dickinson. 1978 scan of a Daguerreotype. ca. 1847; in the Amherst College Archives. American poet. See Notes:
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Poetry: First Lines

Van Ostaijen also wrote several perceptive essays on art and literature, collected in two volumes (1929–31). His creative prose, such as that in Vogelvrij (1927; “Outlawed”) and Diergaarde voor kinderen van nu (1932; “Zoo for Today’s Children”), consists mainly of grotesque sketches that demonstrate his keen imagination. Its lucidity, stubborn analysis of a theme, and underlying restlessness sometimes recall the prose of the Austrian writer Franz Kafka. Not surprisingly, van Ostaijen had been Kafka’s first foreign translator, publishing in Dutch five of Kafka’s short prose pieces in 1925. Van Ostaijen’s collected works (Verzameld werk), edited by G. Borgers, were published in four volumes (1952–56; reprinted 1970).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.