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Exhibition

Exhibition
Simenon

From 16 March to 29 September 2024

Georges Simenon, 1969, Épalinges © Collection John Simenon / Photo : Marc Garanger, Aurimages
Graphisme : Omnigroup

Introduction

Starting out as a journalist, Georges Simenon (Liège, 1903 — Lausanne, 1989) forged a career for himself as a novelist, restless traveler, and photographer. He left behind in the public’s imagination a singular image, the silhouette of a pipe-smoking man sporting a trench coat and fedora that melded with commissaire Maigret, the fictional French police detective that made the author a celebrity,. By his own admission, these detective stories taught him how to be a professional writer and, along the way, brought him great success, wealth, and international fame.

Georges Simenon, Londres, 1934 | Collection John Simenon © DR

Georges Simenon, Londres, 1934 | Collection John Simenon © DR

Simenon’s literary career started in 1921 with his novel Au pont des Arches (Imprimerie Bénard), which he published under the name Georges Sim. There followed a long list of popular, realist and adventure novels – one hundred and ninety titles between 1924 and 1930 under seventeen different pennames – in most cases brought out by Éditions Ferenczi et fils, until the 1931 publication of Monsieur Gallet, décédé and Le pendu de Saint-Pholien (Arthème Fayard et Cie), which launched the Maigret series. In 1934 he began his association with Gallimard when he published Le locataire (The Lodger), one of what he called his romans durs (“hard novels,” which have been described as psychological thrillers); and later it was his autobiographical text Je me souviens (1945) that sealed his relationship with Les Presses de la Cité.

Enveloppe manuscrite de La première enquête de Maigret, 1949 | © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Enveloppe manuscrite de La première enquête de Maigret, 1949 | © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Georges Simenon, Les mémoires de Maigret, Presses de la Cité, Paris, 1951 Collection John Simenon

Georges Simenon, Les mémoires de Maigret, Presses de la Cité, Paris, 1951 Collection John Simenon

An intuitive novelist who saw writing as the job of a craftsman, Simenon worked at a steady pace, forced his publishers to bring out a higher number of titles than they usually did, strictly prohibited them from making corrections to his typescripts, and made sure he had a say in the choice of covers. Although he seems to have thoroughly mastered the various stages that put his books in the hands of readers, his body of work remained open, organic, alive to possibilities, renewing its forms and in the process offering his readers great freedom within the pages of his stories.

Calendrier d’écriture du roman En cas de malheur, 1955 © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Calendrier d’écriture du roman En cas de malheur, 1955 © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Through his candid remarks to the press, photographs of his family life and the places where he did his writing, a selection of manuscripts, typescripts and first editions, along with a cycle of film adaptations, our Simenon exhibition invites visitors to get to know the author as well as read, hear, and see his work. To journalists who regularly put the question to him, he would, clearly amused, rattle off some of the numbers, 103 Maigrets, 117 psychological thrillers, and 25 autobiographical texts.

Le chien jaune, 29 juin 1932, Adaptation cinématographique du roman éponyme de Georges Simenon, réalisée par Jean Taride sur un scénario de Georges Simenon | Collection John Simenon

Le chien jaune, 29 juin 1932, Adaptation cinématographique du roman éponyme de Georges Simenon, réalisée par Jean Taride sur un scénario de Georges Simenon | Collection John Simenon

Georges Simenon, Épalinges, 1964, par Gertrude Fehr | Collection John Simenon © DR

Georges Simenon, Épalinges, 1964, par Gertrude Fehr | Collection John Simenon © DR

Exhibition created by

Sarah Radicchi and Natalia Granero, with the welcome assistance of John Simenon

Collection on view

Collection John Simenon
Private collection
Fonds Simenon ULiège
Institut national de l’audiovisuel (INA)

Visit the exhibition

Opening hours

16 March - 29 September 2024
Tuesday - Friday: 2 - 6 pm
Saturday and Sunday: 11 am - 6 pm
Ascension Thursday (9 May) and Pentecost Monday (19 May): 11 am - 6 pm

Admission

CHF 8.– (general admission)
CHF 5.– (groups, retirees, unemployed, disabled persons)
Free admission for visitors under 25, students, residents of Montricher and library members, and the first Sunday of each month for all

Georges Simenon, Londres, 1934 | Collection John Simenon © DR

Georges Simenon, Londres, 1934 | Collection John Simenon © DR

Enveloppe manuscrite de La première enquête de Maigret, 1949 | © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Enveloppe manuscrite de La première enquête de Maigret, 1949 | © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Georges Simenon, Les mémoires de Maigret, Presses de la Cité, Paris, 1951 Collection John Simenon

Georges Simenon, Les mémoires de Maigret, Presses de la Cité, Paris, 1951 Collection John Simenon

Calendrier d’écriture du roman En cas de malheur, 1955 © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Calendrier d’écriture du roman En cas de malheur, 1955 © Simenon.TM, Collection Fonds Simenon, Université de Liège

Le chien jaune, 29 juin 1932, Adaptation cinématographique du roman éponyme de Georges Simenon, réalisée par Jean Taride sur un scénario de Georges Simenon | Collection John Simenon

Le chien jaune, 29 juin 1932, Adaptation cinématographique du roman éponyme de Georges Simenon, réalisée par Jean Taride sur un scénario de Georges Simenon | Collection John Simenon

Georges Simenon, Épalinges, 1964, par Gertrude Fehr | Collection John Simenon © DR

Georges Simenon, Épalinges, 1964, par Gertrude Fehr | Collection John Simenon © DR