In his studio of Montparnasse, in 1937, he executed a Guernica sculpture on the day (27 April 1937) of the announcement of this event on the radio station. Upon completing the work he did not wish to exhibit it.
He was amongst the 200 pioneers of the French Resistance – he was in the Groupe du musée de l'Homme – during the summer of 1940 and participated at the Degenerate art exhibitions. He sculpted so La Déchirée (The Torn), which was brought to London and given to General Charles de Gaulle, became one of the symbols of the French Resistance.[1][2]
^Lyford Amy, Surrealist masculinities, Ed. University Presses Of California, Columbia And Princeton (United States), 2007.
^"René Iché". Olympedia. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
^Peter Read, Picasso and Apollinaire. Ed. University Presses Of California, Columbia And Princeton (United States), April 2008.
^Premier Manifeste des Sculpteurs, by René Iché, Surrealist trac, November 1949
Bibliographic Guide to Art and Architecture, 1978. G.K. Hall. Page 488.
Jane Clapp, Sculpture Index. 1970. Scarecrow Press. x pages. Page 459.
Robert Maillard, Dictionary of Modern Sculpture, 1962. Tudor. 310 pages. Page 141.
Michel Seuphor, The Sculpture of this Century, Dictionary of Modern Sculpture. 1959. Zwemmer. 372 pages. Page 282.
Julian Park, The culture of France in our time. 1954. Cornell University Press. 345 pages. Page 87
Daniel Trowbridge Mallett, Index of Artists, International-biographical Including Painters, Sculptors ... 1935. R.R. Bowker Co. 493 pages. ISBN0-901571-76-8. Page 136.