Benedikt Konstantinovich Livshits (, 24 December 1886 (Old Style)/6 January 1887 (New Style) â 21 September 1938) was a poet and writer of the Silver Age of Russian Poetry, a FrenchâÂÂRussian poetry translator.
Livshits was born to an assimilated Jewish family in Odessa. He studied law at Novorossia University and then moved to Kiev University, where he graduated in 1912. He was conscripted to the Russian army and served in the 88th Infantry Regiment. In 1914, he was conscripted again and served in the infantry during World War I, being awarded the Cross of St. George.
In 1908, "The Exhibition of Modern Art" was staged in Kublin. This exhibition, which included the works of Georges Braque, Henri Matisse, and other European postimpressionist painters, made a profound impression on the young Livshits. His first poetry was published in the Anthology of Modern Poetry (Kiev) a year later. In 1910 he worked for Sergei Makovsky's symbolist art magazine Apollon.
Together with Wladimir Burliuk, David Burliuk, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Vasily Kamensky he was a member and co-founder of the major Russian Futurist group Hylaea (Russian Gilea). It is said to have been established after Livshits and the Burliuk brothers vacationed at the estate of Count Mordvinov in Chernianka. David Burliuk, Kamensky, and Livshits would form the nucleus of Cubo-Futurism, which became the most influential subdivision of Futurism. He left the movement in 1914, together with Velimir Khlebnikov (who would later resume his Futurist activity), protesting from a nationalist standpoint against the visit of Filippo Marinetti to Saint Petersburg.
His own poetry, however, was only tangentially connected with the mainstream of Russian Futurism, let alone Cubo-Futurism, with its predominantly anti-aesthetic, primitivist, and urbanistic imagery and zaum language. Although Lifshits experimented with transferring the procedures of French Cubist painting into literature (his best-known Futurist text was the short prose People in Landscape, featuring syntactic dislocations and non-figurative imagery), the bulk of his poetry is euphonic, written in traditional Classicist verse and archaic diction, and employs complex metaphors with references to European poetry and Antiquity. Much of his work is underpinned by a shared philosophical conception of nature and culture, as well as a complex Eurasian view of Russia.
His four volumes of poetry are Marsyas' Flute (1911), Wolves' Sun (1914; the title quotes Tristan Corbière), Swamp Medusa (1921, on Saint Petersburg), and Patmos (1926). In 1928, he published Noon at Crotone, which brought together much of his earlier work. In the 1930s, Lifshits wrote many poems on Georgian themes; he visited Georgia many times, befriended Georgian poets whose verse he also translated, learned the language, and planned to publish a fifth collection, Kartvelian Odes. It was not published, however, until his posthumous rehabilitation in 1964, in Tbilisi.
In 1933 he published a book of memoirs, The One and a Half-Eyed Archer, which is considered one of the best histories of Russian Futurism. This work also detailed the cultural discomfort of a fully assimilated Jewish artist in Russia. In 1934, he published a large book of translations from French poetry, From Romantics to Surrealism. An analysis of his translation works noted his tendency to uphold the structure of the material being translated as a whole and to maintain close proximity to the original.
In 1937, Livshits also became a victim of Joseph Stalin's Great Purge. He was arrested in October 1937 and summarily executed with other Leningrad writers on 21 September 1938 as an "enemy of the people", ostensibly admitting, under torture, to having planned terrorist acts with the Trotskyite Victor Serge. His dossier was falsified to state that he died of heart failure on 15 May 1939. His large archive and library was destroyed by NKVD. Lifshits' translations were re-published since 1960s, and memoirs and original poetry since 1989.