Biography
Nicolas Calas was born Nikos Kalamaris in Lausanne, Switzerland, May 27, 1907, but grew up in Athens, the only son of Ioannis Kalamaris who descended from a family of ship-owners and landowners from the island Syros, and Rosa Caradja who was the great-granddaughter of Markos Botsaris, the military leader and hero of the Greek War of Independence, and a descendant from the Phanariot Caradja family, a noble family which supplied high officials to the Ottoman Empire and rotating rulers to Danubian principalities. Calas later rebelled against his wealthy family background by becoming a Trotskyist, strongly influenced in his turn to radical politics by witnessing the human tragedy of the refugees of the 1922 Asia Minor catastrophe flooding the streets of Athens.Greece
Calas studied Law and Political Science at the University of Athens between 1925 and 1930 and became active in the radical Student Society. Although he worked in a law office between 1930 and 1934, he soon abandoned this career to concentrate on his writing, both poetry and literary and political critique, often highly polemical in both style and content. Calas's critical work, mostly published under the pseudonym M. Spieros (influenced by the French revolutionary Maximilien Robespierre), was published in a string of literary and political journals in Greece between 1929 and 1938. He covered a wide range of subjects, such as cinema, politics and literary criticism, and he was the first critic to analyze the poetry ofFrance
Between 1934 and 1937, Calas split his time between Athens and Paris, where he soon became a member of the surrealist group attached toPortugal
Forced to leave France at the eruption of World War II, Calas reached Lisbon in October 1939 where he waited for an opportunity to get on a boat to USA. During the few months he stayed in the Portuguese capital, he studied the baroque architecture of the city apart from trying to form a group of surrealists. He was finally able to leave Europe behind in the beginning of 1940 after receiving a visa through the help of his friend Sherry Mangan, an American Trotskyist poet and journalist working for '' Time'' magazine.New York
Calas arrived in New York as one of the first émigré surrealists in 1940 and ended up living there until his death in 1988, working mainly as an art critic for several leading art journals, such as ''View'', '' Village Voice'', ''Arts Magazine'' and '' Artforum''. Before Calas was able to carve a niche for himself as an art critic and lecturer, he earned his living from a number of odd jobs. From 1942 to 1945 he worked in the French and Greek sections of the Office of War Information as well as in the Balkan section of the Intelligence Service. His first book in English, a collection of essays on poetry, Portuguese Baroque, portrait painting and modern architecture, ''Confound the Wise'', was published in 1942. In 1943 he married the divorcee Elena von Hoershelman, a Russian-born psychoanalyst with whom he would go on to collaborate on a number of research projects, articles and books. For some years they worked together at the Columbia University Project of Studies in Contemporary Cultures. During this time Calas became a research-associate and consultant for the renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead and in 1953 their collaboration resulted in the publication of an anthropological anthology entitled Primitive Heritage. Calas received three successive grants from theGreek comeback
After spending some time in Greece during the 1950s, sorting out the family affairs after the death of his father, Calas began to write poems again in Greek in a cryptic and satirical style. These poems were first published in the avant-garde journal ''Pali'' (Πάλι) in the 1960s. This led to a comeback in Greece where he had previously been ignored or neglected as a poet. His old poems were republished together with his new poetry in the two collections ''Nikitas Randos Street'' (Οδός Νικήτα Ράντου), which won the State Prize for poetry in 1977, and ''Scripture and Light'' (Γραφή και φως) in 1983. Interest in his writings has been steadily increasing in Greece and he is now acknowledged as a groundbreaking poet and an important representative of modernism and a forerunner to Greek surrealism. After the death of Nicolas Calas in 1988 and his wife Elena Calas one year later, their art collection was inherited by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark. The Nicolas and Elena Calas Archives are located at the Nordic Library in Athens.Works
Poetry
*''Poems'' (Ποιήματα, 1932) *''Notebook I'' (Τετράδιο Α’, 1933) *''Notebook II'' (Τετράδιο Β’, 1933) *''Notebook III'' (Τετράδιο Γ’, 1934) *''Notebook IV'' (Τετράδιο Δ’, 1936) *''Nikitas Randos Street'' (Οδός Νικήτα Ράντου, 1977. *''Scripture and Light'' (Γραφή και φως, 1983). *''Sixteen French Poems and Correspondence with William Carlos Williams'' (Δεκαέξι γαλλικά ποιήματα και αλληλογραφία με τον Ουίλλιαμ Κάρλος Ουίλλιαμς, ed. Spilios Argyropoulos and Vassiliki Kolocotroni, 2002). *''Oedipus is Innocent'' (Selected poems edited and translated by Lena Hoff, 2020).Prose, essays, letters
*''Hearths of Arson'' (French: Foyers d’incendie, 1938) *''Confound the Wise'' (1942) *''Primitive Heritage'' (co-edited with Margaret Mead, 1953) *''The Peggy Guggenheim Collection of Modern Art'' (co-written with Elena Calas, 1967) *''Art in the Age of Risk'' (1968) *''Icons and Images of the Sixties'' (co-written with Elena Calas, 1971) *''Surrealism Pro & Con'' (1973) *''Essays on Poetry and Aesthetics'' (Greek: Κείμενα ποιητικής και αισθητικής, ed. Alex. Argyriou, 1982). *''Transfigurations'' (1985) *''Yorgos Theotokas and Nicolas Calas. A Correspondence'' (Greek: Γιώργος Θεοτοκάς και Νικόλας Κάλας. Μια αλληλογραφία, ed. Ioanna Konstantoulaki-Hantzou, 1989) *''Nicolas Calas – Michalis Raptis. A Political Correspondence'' (Greek: Νικόλας Κάλας – Μιχάλης Ράπτης. Μια πολιτική αλληλογραφία, ed. Lena Hoff, 2002). * ''Nicolas Calas – André Breton: lettres sur Hitler et l'impuissance de la littérature'', in: Mélusine (Cahiers du Centre de Recherche sur le Surréalisme) XXXI: 231-252 (ed. Dimitri Kravvaris, 2011).Notes
References
*Christopher MacGowan (1996), "Sparkles of Understanding: Williams and Nicolas Calas", ''William Carlos Williams Review'', 22:1 (Spring), 81–98. *Panayiotis Bosnakis (1998), "Nicolas Calas's Poetry and the Critique of Greekness", ''Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora'', 24:2, 25–40. *Roderick Beaton (1999), ''An Introduction to Modern Greek Literature'', Oxford: Clarendon Press. *Lena Hoff (2001), ''The Nicolas and Elena Calas Archive Catalogue'', Athens: The Danish Institute at Athens. *Dickran Tashjian (2001), ''A Boatload of Madmen: Surrealism and the American Avant-Garde 1920–1950'', New York: Thames and Hudson. *Lena Hoff (2002), "A Surrealist Controversy – The Ideological Conflicts between Nicolas Calas and André Breton during World War II", ''Scandinavian Journal of Modern Greek Studies'', 1, 20–29. ISSN 1651-1492 *Lena Hoff (2003), "Resistance in Exile – A Study of the Political Correspondence between Nicolas Calas and Michalis Raptis ( ichel Pablo 1967–72", ''Scandinavian Journal of Modern Greek Studies'', 2, 17-41. ISSN 1651-1492 *Lena Hoff (2008), "The Critical Poetry of Nicolas Calas: Challenging the Poetics of Greekness", ''Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies'' 32:1, 104–121. ISSN 0307-0131 *Nikos Stabakis (ed. + transl.) (2008), ''Surrealism in Greece: An Anthology'', University of Texas Press. *Lena Hoff (2009), "The Return of Nikitas Randos: Satire, Memory and Otherness in the Post-War Poetry of Nicolas Calas", pp. 229–240 in ''Greek Diaspora and Migration Since 1700'', Surrey: Ashgate, ed. Dimitris Tziovas. *Lena Hoff (2014), ''Nicolas Calas and the Challenge of Surrealism'', Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.External links