Le cancre

Le cancre

Unleashing collective creativity

Ages

5+ yrs

Audience

1st Grade to High School

Duration

1h à 2h

Capacity

8-15 enfants

Skills Developed

CréativitéExpression libreCoopérationConfiance en soi
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About this workshop

Like The Gonk – that free and rebellious character who dances between the lines of Prévert’s poems, our workshop program is an open door to the unexpected, a space where rules are broken to better invent their own through drawing and poetry. A program at the intersection of multiple disciplines: French, visual arts, history, and moral and civic education. With Eugénie Bachelot-Prévert, artist and granddaughter of Jacques Prévert, and the association Chez Jacques Prévert, we designed this program to explore her grandfather’s work while connecting it with her own experiences with her artist friends from the Beaux-Arts de Paris. During this program, we will revisit The Gonk, this poem that has become a classic. Inspired by the Surrealists, like the Gonk, we will start our creative journey off the beaten path. We will let go, surprise ourselves, have fun, and dare. This program is an invitation to awaken creativity and collective intelligence. It will conclude with a participatory exhibition, either at Jacques Prévert’s apartment or within school institutions.

"The workshop that unleashes creative potential and transforms uncertainty into collective strength"

The Associated Story

Le Cancre by Jacques Prévert

Le Cancre by Jacques Prévert

"Le Canccre", composed by Jacques Prévert during the interwar period, a time of profound social upheaval in France, was published in 1946 in the collection Paroles. Rejecting any label, Prévert broke free from Surrealism while maintaining his libertarian spirit, revolutionizing academic norms with accessible and subversive writing. The poem denounces the school of that era, marked by strict discipline and authoritarian teaching. By making the bungler a hero of creative resistance, Prévert transforms his observation into a poetic manifesto: in the face of authority that imposes a "no" of reason, the child responds with the "yes" of his heart. Through free verse, jarring rhythm, and absence of punctuation, the poem embodies this freedom, celebrating emotional intelligence and art as acts of rebellion against uniformity. Still relevant today, The Bungler remains a plea for those who, refusing to be confined, choose to forge their own path.

Values

creativityfreedomexpression

The Artist

EUGÉNIE BACHELOT-PRÉVERT

EUGÉNIE BACHELOT-PRÉVERT

Eugénie Bachelot Prévert, granddaughter of poet Jacques Prévert, offers a new perspective on "Le Cancre" for Une histoire au mur. Graduated from the Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2000, this artist born in 1974 has always sought to preserve spontaneity and freedom in her art, qualities so dear to childhood. She smiles at the irony that this poem celebrating a rebellious child has become a school classic, sometimes even a source of punishment for those who struggle to memorize it. Inspired by her experience of sharing drawings with her friends from the Beaux-Arts, Eugénie interpreted the poem with her daughter Lila. They chose to depict two women who seem to be in the midst of a whirlwind and to do only what they please. This approach, both respectful of her family heritage and deeply personal, perfectly reflects her artistic journey, where painting, installations, and performances blend together, always with that touch of joyful irreverence that characterizes her popular and free-spirited art.

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Interested in this workshop?

We offer a discussion with your teaching team before each workshop to best adapt our interventions to your needs.

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