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Abbaye de Créteil.
Community of French writers, artists and composers in operation from November 1906 to February 1908, located in a villa on the banks of the Marne at Créteil, south-east of Paris. Their choice of name paid homage to François Rabelais, whose Gargantua had established the Abbey of Thelema as a model monastery, a self-supporting commune whose members devoted part of each day to group labour and the rest to perfecting the self intellectually. The Abbaye de Créteil numbered among its members the painters Albert Gleizes, Charles Berthold-Mahn and Jacques dOtemar, the poets Charles Vildrac (b 1882), Georges Duhamel (18841966), René Arcos, Alexandre Mercereau, JULES ROMAINS, Henri-Martin Barzun (b 1881), the composer Albert Doyen, and the printer Lucien Linard, whom Gleizes had met while doing his military service. It was through Linards trade of printing and publishing that the Abbaye hoped to secure its material future.
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