Princeton University Art Museum: The illustrated journal Le Mot was created in response to the outbreak of war and its effect on the avant-garde in France. Le Mot’s founder, the poet w:Jean Cocteau, had attempted to enlist in the army but was rejected for health reasons. In search of another way to help the war effort, Cocteau joined with illustrator and designer Paul Iribe to publish Le Mot. Featured inside is a woodcut after a brush drawing of a group of wounded soldiers returning from the front by the French Cubist painter w:Albert Gleizes.
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The author died in 1953, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.
== Summary == {{Information | Description = Albert Gleizes, 1915, ''Retour de Bois-le-Prêtre'', wood engraving, 39 x 50 cm, published in Le mot, n. 20, 1 July 1915 | Source = [http://armory.nyhistory.org/woman-with-phlox/ armory.nyhist...
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