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Alfred Kreymborg

Alfred Francis Kreymborg (December 10, 1883 – August 14, 1966) was an American poet, novelist, playwright, literary editor and anthologist.

Alfred Kreymborg, circa 1917.

Early life and associations

He was born in New York City to Hermann and Louisa Kreymborg (née Nasher), who ran a small cigar store,[1] and he spent most of his life there and in New Jersey. He was an active figure in Greenwich Village and frequented the Liberal Club.[2]

He was the first literary figure to be included in Alfred Stieglitz's 291 circle,[3] and was briefly associated with the Ferrer Center where Man Ray was studying under Robert Henri. From 1913 to 1914, Kreymborg and Man Ray worked together to bring out ten issues[4] of the first of Kreymborg's prominent modernist magazines: The Glebe. Ezra Pound – who had heard about The Glebe from Kreymborg's friend John Cournos[5] – sent Kreymborg the manuscript of Des Imagistes in the summer of 1913[6] and this famous first anthology of Imagism was published as the fifth issue of The Glebe[7]

 
The cover of the first edition of Kreymborg's Mushrooms (1916): a book of free verse tone-poems

In 1913 Man Ray and Samuel Halpert, another of Henri's students, started an artist's colony in Ridgefield, New Jersey.[8] This colony was often also referred to as 'Grantwood' and comprised a number of clapboard shacks on a bluff[9] on the Hudson Palisades opposite Grants Tomb, across the Hudson River in Manhattan. Kreymborg moved to Ridgefield and launched Others: A Magazine of the New Verse with Skipwith Cannell, Wallace Stevens, and William Carlos Williams in 1915. Pound had, along with the Des Imagistes poems, written to Kreymborg suggesting that he contact 'old Bull' Williams,[7] that is William Carlos Williams. Williams did not live far from Ridgefield, and he became involved in the magazine. Soon there was a group of artists associated with the magazine. Marianne Moore came to Ridgefield for picnics, and from 1915 Marcel Duchamp occasionally visited.[10] Regarding Marianne Moore, when asked whether Kreymborg was her American discoverer, she replied, "It could be said, perhaps; he did all he could to promote me. Miss Monroe and the Aldingtons had asked me simultaneously to contribute to Poetry and The Egoist in 1915. Alfred Kreymborg was not inhibited. I was a little different from the others. He thought that I might pass as a novelty, I guess."[11]

1915 also saw the publication of a story in part based on a personal experience. The story was titled 'Edna' and published as Edna: The Girl of the Street; by the Greenwich Village entrepreneur Guido Bruno; the subtitle was Bruno's idea, added without the consent of the author.[12] John S. Sumner of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice raised a stir; there was a court case which led to Bruno's imprisonment. The attendant morals row drew in George Bernard Shaw and Frank Harris: Harris made an impassioned statement in court defending the publisher.[12]

Kreymborg was lifelong friends with Carl Sandburg, each independently choosing to write in free verse. Kreymborg's tone-poems, or 'mushrooms', had seldom made it into print, but in 1916, soon after his move to Ridgefield they were brought out in book form by John Marshall as 'Mushrooms: A Book of Free Forms' and Williams praised them as a "triumph for America".[Note 1]

Kreymborg spent a year touring the United States, mostly visiting universities, reading his poetry — including at The Sunwise Turn in New York, an early supporter of his work — while accompanying himself on a mandolute.

1920s

Kreymborg continued to edit Others somewhat erratically until 1919;[13] he then in June 1921 sailed to Europe[7] to act as co-editor of Broom, An International Magazine of the Arts (along with Harold Loeb).[14] Contributors included Malcolm Cowley, E. E. Cummings, Amy Lowell and Walter de la Mare. The magazine lost money. Kreymborg soon resigned and the magazine ceased publication in 1924.[15] An ironic anecdote on the status of modernism: Kreymborg arranged for an aspiring artist Fernand Léger to create the artwork for the cover of volume 2, number 4 of Broom.[14][16] When Broom ceased publication, the original painting was left behind for its next tenants. Original works by Léger from that time period have sold for several million dollars.[17]

Kreymborg's poems appeared in The Dial in 1923.[Note 2]

In the summer of 1925, Kreymborg was staying in Lake George Village, and happened to meet Paul Rosenfeld who was staying with Stieglitz. In one late night discussion Kreymborg and Rosenfeld lamented the disappearance of various literary magazines, including Broom. Another neighbor, Samuel Ornitz appeared and offered financial backing for an annual book of new writing. Thus Kreymborg and Rosenfeld founded American Caravan, which was to be edited by Lewis Mumford and Van Wyck Brooks.[18] The Second American Caravan, was edited by Kreymborg, Mumford, and Rosenfeld; it was reviewed the December 1928 issue of The Dial.

1925 also saw the publication of his autobiography Troubadour, in which he refers to himself in the third person by the nicknames "Ollie" and "Krimmie". Among other things, the book narrate Kreymborg's courtship of and marriage to Gertrude Lord ("Christine") and their amicable separation one year later on account of Gertrude's attachment to the American artist Carl Schmitt ("Charles").[19] (His play "The Silent Waiter," loosely based on his first marriage, was performed by NYC's Metropolitan Playhouse in a virtual livestreamed production on March 13, 2021, with commentary.) It also tells of his second marriage to Dorothy ("Dot") Bloom.

In 1929, Random House chose him to be one of the poets to appear in The Poetry Quartos, proposed by Paul Johnston. Kreymborg contributed the poem, "Body and Stone." He also contributed a short story to The Prose Quartos, published by Random House in 1930.

1930s and later

In 1938 Kreymborg's verse drama for radio The Planets: A Modern Allegory was broadcast by NBC and received such an enthusiastic response from the public that it was repeated a few weeks later.

Kreymborg maintained a long-term connection with Alfred Stieglitz primarily because of Kreymborg's relationship with Hugo Knudsen, who invented some of the early photo-printing processes that Stieglitz utilized. Knudsen and Kreymborg married sisters Beatrice (Bea) and Dot Bloom (respectively).

Other interests

He also wrote puppet plays (his most famous being Manikin Minikin and Lima Beans), which he performed with his wife, Dot, while touring the United States.

Kreymborg played chess at a near-professional level; he was recognized as a National Master standard player in his youth.[20] On two occasions he played and lost to José Capablanca, including a defeat in 1910 due to a mix-up in his endgame[21] He drew one game with the U.S. Champion Frank Marshall in the 1911 Masters Tournament, but shortly afterward left the chess world after a stunning defeat by Oscar Chajes, returning to the sport roughly 23 years later. He wrote the article 'Chess Reclaims a Devotee', which is semi-autobiographical and also based on Charles Jaffe; the story is well known in chess circles.[22]

Kreymborg was very close with sculptor Alexander "Sandy" Calder.[citation needed]

Due to his knack of "discovering" and publishing some of the most important poets during his time, Kreymborg later became president of the Poetry Society of America.

Critical views

Kreymborg later became a relatively conservative poet, but – according to Julian Symons – "never an interesting one"[13]

In Namedropping, Richard Elman writes a short chapter about a meeting with Kreymborg in the early 1960s.[23]

Works

Maxim Lieber was Kreymborg's literary agent in 1947.

  • Love and Life and Other Studies (1908)
  • Apostrophes: A Book of Tributes to Masters of Music (1910)
  • Erna Vitek (1914) novel
  • Edna: The Girl of the Street (1915) [1] PDF of 1919 edition with G. B. Shaw contribution
  • To My Mother 10 Rhythms (1915)
  • Mushrooms: A Book of Free Forms (1916) poems, as 1915 Mushrooms 16 Rhythms in Bruno Chap Books
  • Others: An Anthology of the New Verse (1916) editor
  • Others: An Anthology of the New Verse (1917) editor
  • Six Plays for Poem-Mimes (1918)
  • Blood of Things: A Second Book of Free Forms (1920)
  • Others for 1919: An Anthology of the New Verse (1920)
  • Plays for Merry Andrews (1920)
  • Less Lonely (1923)
  • Puppet Plays (1923)
  • Troubadour (1925) autobiography
  • Lima Beans. A Scherzo Play in One Act (1925)
  • Rocking Chairs and Other Comedies (1925)
  • Manikin and Minikin (1925)
  • Scarlet and Mellow (1926)
  • There's a Moon Tonight (1926) comedy
  • The American Caravan (1927), yearbook, editor with Lewis Mumford, Van Wyck Brooks and Paul Rosenfeld, later years also
  • Funnybone Alley (1927)
  • The Lost Sail, A Cape Cod Diary (1928)
  • Alfred Kreymborg (1928) The Pamphlet Poets
  • Manhattan Men: Poems and Epitaphs (1929) poems
  • Body and Stone: A Song Cycle (1929)
  • Our Singing Strength, An Outline of American Poetry, 1620 - 1930 (1929) also later in 1934
  • An Anthology of American Poetry Lyric: America 1630–1930 (1930) anthology, later editions are supplemented
  • Prologue in Hell (1930)
  • I'm Not Complaining: A Kaffeeklatsch (1932)
  • Little World. 1914 and After (1932)
  • I'm No Hero (1933)
  • How Do You Do Sir? And Other Short Plays (1934)
  • Anthology of One-Act Plays 1937-38 (1938) editor
  • The Planets: A Modern Allegory (1938)
  • Two New Yorkers (1938) editor Stanley Burnshaw, illustrated by Alexander Kruse
  • The Four Apes and Other Fables of Our Day (1939)
  • Poetic Drama: An Anthology of Plays in Verse (1941) editor
  • Ten American Ballads (1942)
  • Selected Poems 1912 to 1944 (1945)
  • Man and Shadow: An Allegory (1946) poems
  • The Poetry Society of America Anthology (1946) editor with Amy Bonner and others
  • No More War: An Ode to Peace (1949)
  • No More War and other poems (1950)

Notes

  1. ^ According to Symons (1987), pp. 122, 127, the 'Mushrooms' had been "unpublishable", although this does not seem quite fair as the acknowledgements page thanks the editors of The New Republic, The Poetry Journal, Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, Others: A Magazine of the New Verse, The Egoist, Catholic Anthology, Bruno Chap Books, Greenwich Village and Rogue.
  2. ^ His 'Six Movements' appeared in Volume 75 No.5 (November 1923). Symons (1987), p. 152 indicates that his work appeared in early 1921, but the only mention of Kreymborg in the contents for that period is for a comment on the forthcoming Broom in Issue Volume 70 No.5 May 1921.

References

  1. ^ Chess History, #3569
  2. ^ Stansell (2000), p. 83
  3. ^ Eisler (1991), p. 104
  4. ^ Churchill (1998), p. 53
  5. ^ Bochner (1992), p. 137
  6. ^ Kenner (1972), p. 158
  7. ^ a b c Churchill (1998), p. 52
  8. ^ Churchill (1998), p. 51
  9. ^ Brandon (1999), p. 82
  10. ^ Stansell (2000), pp. 99–100
  11. ^ The Art of Poetry: Marianne Moore 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ a b Kreymborg, Troubador, Chapter 12, page 79.
  13. ^ a b Symons (1987), p. 122
  14. ^ a b Periodicals 2006-10-26 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Carpenter (1987), p. 168
  16. ^ Modern Illustrated Books 2007-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Silberman (2002)
  18. ^ Eisler (1991), p. 346
  19. ^ The National Cyclopedia of American Biography, vol. 3 (ed. James Terry White, 1952), p. 71.
  20. ^ Brandon (1999), p. 64
  21. ^ Chess History Note
  22. ^ See Chess History Note
  23. ^ Namedropping

Bibliography

  • Bochner, Jay (1992). "The Glebe". In Edward E. Chielens (ed.). American Literary Magazines: The Twentieth Century. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  • Brandon, Ruth (1999). Surreal Lives: The Surrealists 1917–1945. Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3727-X.
  • Carpenter, Humphrey (1987). Geniuses Together: American Writers in Paris in the 1920s. Unwin Hyman. ISBN 0-04-440067-5.
  • Churchill, Suzanne (1998). "Making Space for Others: A History of a Modernist Little Magazine". Journal of Modern Literature. 22 (1).
  • Eisler, Benita (1991). O'Keeffe and Stieglitz: An American Romance. Doubleday. ISBN 0-14-017094-4.
  • Kenner, Hugh (1972). The Pound Era. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-10668-4.
  • Silberman, Vanessa (1 May 2002). . Art Business News. Archived from the original on 4 May 2016.
  • Stansell, Christine (2000). American Moderns: Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century. Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt & Co. ISBN 0-8050-4847-2.
  • Symons, Julian (1987). Makers of the New: The Revolution in Literature, 1912–1939. André Deutsch. ISBN 0-233-98007-5.

External links

  • Works by Alfred Kreymborg at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Alfred Kreymborg at Internet Archive
  • Works by Alfred Kreymborg at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Edward Winter, Alfred Kreymborg and Chess
  • Index entry for Alfred Kreymborg at Poets' Corner
  • 1921 passport photo, Alfred and Dorothy Kreymborg

alfred, kreymborg, alfred, francis, kreymborg, december, 1883, august, 1966, american, poet, novelist, playwright, literary, editor, anthologist, circa, 1917, contents, early, life, associations, 1920s, 1930s, later, other, interests, critical, views, works, n. Alfred Francis Kreymborg December 10 1883 August 14 1966 was an American poet novelist playwright literary editor and anthologist Alfred Kreymborg circa 1917 Contents 1 Early life and associations 2 1920s 3 1930s and later 4 Other interests 5 Critical views 6 Works 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly life and associations EditHe was born in New York City to Hermann and Louisa Kreymborg nee Nasher who ran a small cigar store 1 and he spent most of his life there and in New Jersey He was an active figure in Greenwich Village and frequented the Liberal Club 2 He was the first literary figure to be included in Alfred Stieglitz s 291 circle 3 and was briefly associated with the Ferrer Center where Man Ray was studying under Robert Henri From 1913 to 1914 Kreymborg and Man Ray worked together to bring out ten issues 4 of the first of Kreymborg s prominent modernist magazines The Glebe Ezra Pound who had heard about The Glebe from Kreymborg s friend John Cournos 5 sent Kreymborg the manuscript of Des Imagistes in the summer of 1913 6 and this famous first anthology of Imagism was published as the fifth issue of The Glebe 7 The cover of the first edition of Kreymborg s Mushrooms 1916 a book of free verse tone poems In 1913 Man Ray and Samuel Halpert another of Henri s students started an artist s colony in Ridgefield New Jersey 8 This colony was often also referred to as Grantwood and comprised a number of clapboard shacks on a bluff 9 on the Hudson Palisades opposite Grants Tomb across the Hudson River in Manhattan Kreymborg moved to Ridgefield and launched Others A Magazine of the New Verse with Skipwith Cannell Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams in 1915 Pound had along with the Des Imagistes poems written to Kreymborg suggesting that he contact old Bull Williams 7 that is William Carlos Williams Williams did not live far from Ridgefield and he became involved in the magazine Soon there was a group of artists associated with the magazine Marianne Moore came to Ridgefield for picnics and from 1915 Marcel Duchamp occasionally visited 10 Regarding Marianne Moore when asked whether Kreymborg was her American discoverer she replied It could be said perhaps he did all he could to promote me Miss Monroe and the Aldingtons had asked me simultaneously to contribute to Poetry and The Egoist in 1915 Alfred Kreymborg was not inhibited I was a little different from the others He thought that I might pass as a novelty I guess 11 1915 also saw the publication of a story in part based on a personal experience The story was titled Edna and published as Edna The Girl of the Street by the Greenwich Village entrepreneur Guido Bruno the subtitle was Bruno s idea added without the consent of the author 12 John S Sumner of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice raised a stir there was a court case which led to Bruno s imprisonment The attendant morals row drew in George Bernard Shaw and Frank Harris Harris made an impassioned statement in court defending the publisher 12 Kreymborg was lifelong friends with Carl Sandburg each independently choosing to write in free verse Kreymborg s tone poems or mushrooms had seldom made it into print but in 1916 soon after his move to Ridgefield they were brought out in book form by John Marshall as Mushrooms A Book of Free Forms and Williams praised them as a triumph for America Note 1 Kreymborg spent a year touring the United States mostly visiting universities reading his poetry including at The Sunwise Turn in New York an early supporter of his work while accompanying himself on a mandolute 1920s EditKreymborg continued to edit Others somewhat erratically until 1919 13 he then in June 1921 sailed to Europe 7 to act as co editor of Broom An International Magazine of the Arts along with Harold Loeb 14 Contributors included Malcolm Cowley E E Cummings Amy Lowell and Walter de la Mare The magazine lost money Kreymborg soon resigned and the magazine ceased publication in 1924 15 An ironic anecdote on the status of modernism Kreymborg arranged for an aspiring artist Fernand Leger to create the artwork for the cover of volume 2 number 4 of Broom 14 16 When Broom ceased publication the original painting was left behind for its next tenants Original works by Leger from that time period have sold for several million dollars 17 Kreymborg s poems appeared in The Dial in 1923 Note 2 In the summer of 1925 Kreymborg was staying in Lake George Village and happened to meet Paul Rosenfeld who was staying with Stieglitz In one late night discussion Kreymborg and Rosenfeld lamented the disappearance of various literary magazines including Broom Another neighbor Samuel Ornitz appeared and offered financial backing for an annual book of new writing Thus Kreymborg and Rosenfeld founded American Caravan which was to be edited by Lewis Mumford and Van Wyck Brooks 18 The Second American Caravan was edited by Kreymborg Mumford and Rosenfeld it was reviewed the December 1928 issue of The Dial 1925 also saw the publication of his autobiography Troubadour in which he refers to himself in the third person by the nicknames Ollie and Krimmie Among other things the book narrate Kreymborg s courtship of and marriage to Gertrude Lord Christine and their amicable separation one year later on account of Gertrude s attachment to the American artist Carl Schmitt Charles 19 His play The Silent Waiter loosely based on his first marriage was performed by NYC s Metropolitan Playhouse in a virtual livestreamed production on March 13 2021 with commentary It also tells of his second marriage to Dorothy Dot Bloom In 1929 Random House chose him to be one of the poets to appear in The Poetry Quartos proposed by Paul Johnston Kreymborg contributed the poem Body and Stone He also contributed a short story to The Prose Quartos published by Random House in 1930 1930s and later EditIn 1938 Kreymborg s verse drama for radio The Planets A Modern Allegory was broadcast by NBC and received such an enthusiastic response from the public that it was repeated a few weeks later Kreymborg maintained a long term connection with Alfred Stieglitz primarily because of Kreymborg s relationship with Hugo Knudsen who invented some of the early photo printing processes that Stieglitz utilized Knudsen and Kreymborg married sisters Beatrice Bea and Dot Bloom respectively Other interests EditHe also wrote puppet plays his most famous being Manikin Minikin and Lima Beans which he performed with his wife Dot while touring the United States Kreymborg played chess at a near professional level he was recognized as a National Master standard player in his youth 20 On two occasions he played and lost to Jose Capablanca including a defeat in 1910 due to a mix up in his endgame 21 He drew one game with the U S Champion Frank Marshall in the 1911 Masters Tournament but shortly afterward left the chess world after a stunning defeat by Oscar Chajes returning to the sport roughly 23 years later He wrote the article Chess Reclaims a Devotee which is semi autobiographical and also based on Charles Jaffe the story is well known in chess circles 22 Kreymborg was very close with sculptor Alexander Sandy Calder citation needed Due to his knack of discovering and publishing some of the most important poets during his time Kreymborg later became president of the Poetry Society of America Critical views EditKreymborg later became a relatively conservative poet but according to Julian Symons never an interesting one 13 In Namedropping Richard Elman writes a short chapter about a meeting with Kreymborg in the early 1960s 23 Works EditMaxim Lieber was Kreymborg s literary agent in 1947 Love and Life and Other Studies 1908 Apostrophes A Book of Tributes to Masters of Music 1910 Erna Vitek 1914 novel Edna The Girl of the Street 1915 1 PDF of 1919 edition with G B Shaw contribution To My Mother 10 Rhythms 1915 Mushrooms A Book of Free Forms 1916 poems as 1915 Mushrooms 16 Rhythms in Bruno Chap Books Others An Anthology of the New Verse 1916 editor Others An Anthology of the New Verse 1917 editor Six Plays for Poem Mimes 1918 Blood of Things A Second Book of Free Forms 1920 Others for 1919 An Anthology of the New Verse 1920 Plays for Merry Andrews 1920 Less Lonely 1923 Puppet Plays 1923 Troubadour 1925 autobiography Lima Beans A Scherzo Play in One Act 1925 Rocking Chairs and Other Comedies 1925 Manikin and Minikin 1925 Scarlet and Mellow 1926 There s a Moon Tonight 1926 comedy The American Caravan 1927 yearbook editor with Lewis Mumford Van Wyck Brooks and Paul Rosenfeld later years also Funnybone Alley 1927 The Lost Sail A Cape Cod Diary 1928 Alfred Kreymborg 1928 The Pamphlet Poets Manhattan Men Poems and Epitaphs 1929 poems Body and Stone A Song Cycle 1929 Our Singing Strength An Outline of American Poetry 1620 1930 1929 also later in 1934 An Anthology of American Poetry Lyric America 1630 1930 1930 anthology later editions are supplemented Prologue in Hell 1930 I m Not Complaining A Kaffeeklatsch 1932 Little World 1914 and After 1932 I m No Hero 1933 How Do You Do Sir And Other Short Plays 1934 Anthology of One Act Plays 1937 38 1938 editor The Planets A Modern Allegory 1938 Two New Yorkers 1938 editor Stanley Burnshaw illustrated by Alexander Kruse The Four Apes and Other Fables of Our Day 1939 Poetic Drama An Anthology of Plays in Verse 1941 editor Ten American Ballads 1942 Selected Poems 1912 to 1944 1945 Man and Shadow An Allegory 1946 poems The Poetry Society of America Anthology 1946 editor with Amy Bonner and others No More War An Ode to Peace 1949 No More War and other poems 1950 Notes Edit According to Symons 1987 pp 122 127 the Mushrooms had been unpublishable although this does not seem quite fair as the acknowledgements page thanks the editors of The New Republic The Poetry Journal Poetry A Magazine of Verse Others A Magazine of the New Verse The Egoist Catholic Anthology Bruno Chap Books Greenwich Village and Rogue His Six Movements appeared in Volume 75 No 5 November 1923 Symons 1987 p 152 indicates that his work appeared in early 1921 but the only mention of Kreymborg in the contents for that period is for a comment on the forthcoming Broom in Issue Volume 70 No 5 May 1921 References Edit Chess History 3569 Stansell 2000 p 83 Eisler 1991 p 104 Churchill 1998 p 53 Bochner 1992 p 137 Kenner 1972 p 158 a b c Churchill 1998 p 52 Churchill 1998 p 51 Brandon 1999 p 82 Stansell 2000 pp 99 100 The Art of Poetry Marianne Moore Archived 2007 10 08 at the Wayback Machine a b Kreymborg Troubador Chapter 12 page 79 a b Symons 1987 p 122 a b Periodicals Archived 2006 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Carpenter 1987 p 168 Modern Illustrated Books Archived 2007 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Silberman 2002 Eisler 1991 p 346 The National Cyclopedia of American Biography vol 3 ed James Terry White 1952 p 71 Brandon 1999 p 64 Chess History Note See Chess History Note Namedropping Bibliography Edit Bochner Jay 1992 The Glebe In Edward E Chielens ed American Literary Magazines The Twentieth Century Westport CT Greenwood Press Brandon Ruth 1999 Surreal Lives The Surrealists 1917 1945 Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 3727 X Carpenter Humphrey 1987 Geniuses Together American Writers in Paris in the 1920s Unwin Hyman ISBN 0 04 440067 5 Churchill Suzanne 1998 Making Space for Others A History of a Modernist Little Magazine Journal of Modern Literature 22 1 Eisler Benita 1991 O Keeffe and Stieglitz An American Romance Doubleday ISBN 0 14 017094 4 Kenner Hugh 1972 The Pound Era Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 10668 4 Silberman Vanessa 1 May 2002 Christie s in London recently celebrated a record breaking 104 million week and broke six world records for individual artists the best week the London auction house has had for more than a decade Art Business News Archived from the original on 4 May 2016 Stansell Christine 2000 American Moderns Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century Metropolitan Books Henry Holt amp Co ISBN 0 8050 4847 2 Symons Julian 1987 Makers of the New The Revolution in Literature 1912 1939 Andre Deutsch ISBN 0 233 98007 5 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Alfred Kreymborg Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred Kreymborg Works by Alfred Kreymborg at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Alfred Kreymborg at Internet Archive Works by Alfred Kreymborg at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Edward Winter Alfred Kreymborg and Chess Index entry for Alfred Kreymborg at Poets Corner 1921 passport photo Alfred and Dorothy Kreymborg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred Kreymborg amp oldid 1127645134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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