Guillaume Apollinaire
(Guillaume Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky) 1880–1918
rome, italy
A
pollinaire came to the forefront of the modern age through both his
poetry and his spirit of invention, serving as a sounding board for
many new ideas of his time. He continues to feel among the freshest of
contemporary poets. He is credited with publicizing Cubism as a movement,
coining the term surrealism, which he applied to his play Les Mamelles de Tirésias,
and inventing the ‘‘conversation poem’’—for example, a collage of remarks over-
heard in a bar or a bus. Born in Rome to a Polish mother and Italian father,
Apollinaire sometimes claimed he was the Pope’s son. He was extremely gregar-
ious and, after moving to Paris at the age of twenty, had friends among painters
and writers such as Picasso, André Derain, Marie Laurencin, and Alfred Jarry.
Principal works: Alcools: Poèmes, 1898–1913, 1913; Calligrammes: Poèmes de la paix
et de la guerre, 1913–1916, 1918; Il y a, 1925; L’Esprit nouveau et les poètes, 1946;
Ombre de mon amour (poèmes à Lou), 1947.