In 1938, Cattiaux started work on a series of maxims or aphorisms "encapsulating the inspiration of a friendly muse", and gives them the title of
Le Message Perdu (
The Lost Message). Over a number of years, while not neglecting his painting, he continues writing the book. By 1946, considering the work to be finished, he publishes it at his own expense under the title of
The Message Rediscovered. Made up of twelve chapters, it comprises all the aphorisms that reflect his hermetic experience, numbered by verses and divided in two columns. It was at this time that he began to write his
Physics and Metaphysics of Painting. In 1947, he began a correspondence with
Jean Rousselot and
René Guénon. Thanks to a review by Guénon on
The Message Rediscovered published in 1948 in the journal
Études Traditionnelles, Louis Cattiaux got in touch in 1949 with
Emmanuel d’Hooghvorst, author of
Le Fil de Pénélope. This marked the beginning of an intense relationship between them and with Charles d'Hooghvorst, Emmanuel’s younger brother, whom he met in May 1949. In 1954, ''Les Poèmes du fainéant et les poèmes alchimiques, tristes, zen, d'avant, de la résonance, de la connaissance
by Louis Cattiaux were published by Le Cercle du Livre
. Also in 1954, excerpts from his essay on the Physics and Metaphysics of Painting
were published in a Swiss journal, Les Cahiers Trimestriels Inconnues'' n° 96, as well as an article by Emmanuel d’Hooghvorst entitled “Le Message Prophétique de Louis Cattiaux.” In 1956, the
Message Rediscovered was published in its entirety for the first time by
Éditions Denoël. Currently, Louis Cattiaux’s literary works total more than twenty editions (with many reprints and translations of
The Message Rediscovered). It is translated into Castilian, Catalan, English, Italian, Portuguese, German. In 1999, a lecture dedicated to Cattiaux and
The Message Rediscovered was held at the Sorbonne as part of the Canseliet Colloquium. ==
The Message Rediscovered ==