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Vicente Huidobro

Vicente García-Huidobro Fernández (Latin American Spanish: [biˈsente ɣwiˈðoβɾo]; January 10, 1893 – January 2, 1948) was a Chilean poet born to an aristocratic family. He promoted the avant-garde literary movement in Chile and was the creator and greatest exponent of the literary movement called Creacionismo ("Creationism").

Vicente García-Huidobro
Vicente Huidobro
BornVicente García-Huidobro Fernández
(1893-01-10)January 10, 1893
Santiago, Chile
DiedJanuary 2, 1948(1948-01-02) (aged 54)
Cartagena, Chile
Resting placeCartagena
OccupationPoet
LanguageSpanish
NationalityChilean
EducationColegio San Ignacio
Alma materUniversidad de Chile
PeriodTwentieth Century
GenrePoetry
Literary movementCreacionismo
Notable worksAltazor
Notable awardsMunicipality of Santiago Prize ("El poliedro y el mar").
1963

Municipality of Santiago Prize ("Poesía entera").
1972
María Luisa Bombal Prize Viña del Mar Municipality.
1981

National prize of Literature (CHILE).
1988
SpouseManuela Portales Bello (1912), Ximena Amunátegui, Raquel Señoret
Children5
RelativesMaría Luisa Fernández (mother)
Signature

Life and work edit

Early years edit

Huidobro was born into a wealthy family from Santiago, Chile. He spent his first years in Europe, and was educated by French and English governesses. Once his family was back in Chile, Vicente was enrolled at the Colegio San Ignacio, a Jesuit secondary school in Santiago, where he was expelled for wearing a ring that he claimed was a wedding ring.

In 1910 he studied literature at the Instituto Pedagogico of the University of Chile, but a good part of his knowledge of literature and poetry came from his mother, poet María Luisa Fernández Bascuñán. She used to host "tertulias" or salons in the family home, where sometimes up to 60 people came to talk and to listen to her talk about literature, with guests including members of the family, servants, maids and a dwarf.[1] Later, in 1912, she would help him financially and emotionally to publish his first magazine "Musa Joven" (Young Muse).[2]

In 1911 he published Ecos del alma (Echoes of the Soul), a work with modernist tones. The following year he married Manuela Portales Bello. In 1913 he published Canciones en la noche (Songs in the Night).[3] The book included some poems previously published in "Musa Joven" as well as his first calligram, "Triángulo armónico" ("Harmonic Triangle").

In 1913, along with Carlos Díaz Loyola (better known as Pablo de Rokha), he published three issues of the magazine Azul (Blue), and published both Canciones en la noche and La gruta del silencio (The Grotto of Silence). The next year, he gave a lecture, Non serviam, in which he reflected on his aesthetic vision. The same year, in "Pasando y Pasando"[4] (“Passing and Passing”), Vicente explained his religious doubts, earning himself the reproach of both his family and the Jesuits.

The same year, he published "Las pagodas ocultas" (1916),[5] and signed it for the first time as Vicente Huidobro.

Move abroad edit

In 1916, he traveled to Buenos Aires with Teresa Wilms Montt, a young poet whom he had rescued from a convent. While in Buenos Aires, Huidobro outlined his creationism literary theory, later a literary movement, and published "El espejo de agua" (The Mirror of Water).

Also in 1916, he moved to Europe with his wife and children. While passing through Madrid, he met Rafael Cansino Assens, with whom he had exchanged letters since 1914.

He settled in Paris and published Adán (1916), a work that began his next phase of artistic development. Huidobro met and mixed with most of the Parisian avant garde of this period: Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, Jacques Lipchitz, Francis Picabia, Joan Miró, Max Ernst, Paul Éluard, Amedeo Modigliani and Blaise Cendrars.

In 1917, he contributed to the magazine Nord-Sud edited by Pierre Reverdy, along with Guillaume Apollinaire, Tristan Tzara, Jean Cocteau, André Breton, Louis Aragon and Max Jacob, until a disagreement with Reverdy forced him to leave the magazine. That same year he published Horizon carré, including poems previously shown in "El espejo de agua" translated to French with the help of Juan Gris.

In October 1918, Huidobro traveled to Madrid, making the first in a series of annual trips to that city. There he shared both Creacionismo and his knowledge of the Parisian vanguard with the artistic elite. In Madrid, Vicente met with Robert and Sonia Delaunay, refugees in Spain, and resumed his friendship with Rafael Cansinos-Assens. He started the literary movement Ultraísmo, corresponded with Tristan Tzara and collaborated with him on his Dadaist magazine.

In 1919, he brought to Madrid a rough draft of the series of poems that would eventually become his masterpiece, Altazor. That same year, he took some science classes and became interested in esoteric subjects like astrology, alchemy, ancient Kabbalah among other forms of occultism.

While in Paris, he worked with Amédée Ozenfant and Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris) at L' Esprit Nóuveau, a magazine directed by Paul Dermée. There he also worked for the Spanish magazines "Grecia", "Cervantes", "Tableros" and "Ultra".

In the El Liberal, a Spanish newspaper, journalist and literary critic Enrique Gómez Carrillo published an interview with Pierre Reverdy where he accuses Huidobro of antedating the edition of "El espejo de agua" and claims that he himself created "creacionismo". Grecia magazine took Huidobro's side, and between August and September Huidobro traveled to Madrid to refute Gómez Carrillo's claims.

 
Triangulo Armonico his first calligram

Altazor and creacionismo edit

In 1921, Huidobro founded and edited an international art magazine, Creación (Creation), in Madrid. The magazine featured a Lipchitz sculpture and paintings by Georges Braque, Picasso, Juan Gris and Albert Gleizes. In November he printed a second issue in Paris, titled Création Revue d'Art. In December he presented his famous lecture, La Poesía (Poetry), which served as prologue to his works Temblor de Cielo (Tremor of Heaven), and "Saisons Choisies" (Chosen Seasons).[6]

The next year, Huidobro presented his theory of "Pure Creation" at "Branche Studio" in Paris, and then in Berlin and Stockholm.He wrote for the Polish magazine "Nowa Sztuka". In Paris, his "Painted poems" exhibition at the Théâtre Edouard VII was shut down for being too "disruptive".

In 1923, he published "Finis Britannia", a critique of the British empire, which provoked antipathy from the British and resulted in him receiving a postcard in support from Mahatma Gandhi. In 1924 he was -arguably- kidnapped for this reason, disappearing for three days. Later in an interview, he briefly commented that the perpetrators of the kidnap were two "Irish scouts" but refused to give more details.[7]

Huidobro continued with his diverse artistic activities in Europe, producing the third edition of "Création", where he published his "Manifeste peut-être" (Maybe Manifesto). Collaborator in this edition included Tristan Tzara, René Crevel, Juan Larrea and Erik Satie. He joined the French Masonic Lodge and met Spanish philosopher and writer Miguel de Unamuno, who was exiled in Paris at the time.

In 1925 he returned to Chile, where he edited and published "Acción. Diario de Purificación Nacional" (Action: Journal of National Purification) a political newspaper where he criticised the state and reported fraudulent activities. He was consequently assaulted and beaten outside his home and, on 21 November, the newspaper was shut down. He started another newspaper, "La reforma" (Reform), in a symbolic gesture, young supporters of the progressive party declared him as their candidate for president. A bomb was then set off outside his house, though Huidobro escaped unharmed. While in Chile, he wrote for the publications "Andamios", "Panorama" and "Ariel" and published "Automne Régulier" (Regular Autumn) and "Tout à coup" (Suddenly).

In 1926, he published a fragment of what would become the fourth canto of "Altazor" in "Panorama".

In 1927, he traveled to New York, where he met Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks and Gloria Swanson, wrote a script for a film of his novel "Cagliostro",[8] and wrote the "Canto a Lindbergh" (Song for Lindbergh) dedicated to aviator Charles Lindbergh.

He returned to Europe by the late 1920s, where he began to write the novel, Mío Cid Campeador; he also continued his work on Altazor and began Temblor de Cielo (Tremor of Heaven). It was at this time that he discovered that he was heir to the Marquisate of Casa Real. He also participated in the Mandrágora, a Chilean surrealist movement founded in 1938. There was a scandal when he married Ximena Amunátegui in a Muslim ceremony.

In 1930, while in the Italian Alps, he wrote "La Proxima" (The Next), and published his poem "Chanson de l'oeuf et de l'infini" (Song of the Egg and Infinity) in the magazine "Revue Européenne" and a fragment of "Altazor", in French, in the June edition of "Transition".

In 1931, he went back to Madrid to publish "Altazor", where he attended Federico García Lorca's poetry recital "Poet in New York" and started his friendship with Uruguayan painter Joaquín Torres García. The same year he published "Portrait of a Paladin" and the English versions of his "Mío Cid Campeador", "Temblor de Cielo" and "Altazor".

Back to Chile edit

Huidobro went back to Chile in 1932, under the pressure of the Great Depression. In Chile, he published "Gilles de Raíz".

In 1933, he got involved with the Communist Party of Chile and published his article "Manifiesto a la juventud de Hispanoamérica" (Manifesto to the Youth of Hispano America) in Barcelona's "Europa" magazine, where he proposed the creation of a united republic formed of Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay.

In 1934 he wrote film reviews for Santiago magazines and newspapers, and published "La Próxima" (The Next) (Santiago, Walton); "Papá o el diario de Alicia Mir" (Father, or the diary of Alicia Mir) (Santiago, Walton), a novel written as a diary; and the play "En la Luna" (In the Moon) (Santiago, Ercilla). He founded the magazine Vital/Ombligo with Omar Cáceres and Eduardo Anguita.

In 1935 a young Volodia Teitelboim read a Rabindranath Tagore poem, similar to Poem 16 of Neruda's Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair, Teitelboim mentioned this to Huidobro, and Huidobro accused Neruda of plagiarism. This would initiate a conflict between Neruda and Huidobro that later would involve Pablo de Rokha.

In 1936, along with Picasso, Arp, Kandinsky, and Robert and Sonia Delaunay among others, he signed the "Dimensionist Manifesto"[9]

In 1937, while in Spain supporting the republican cause, the conflict with Neruda resurfaced while Neruda was also supporting the republicans. The Parisian "Association Internationale des Ecrivains pour la Défense de la Culture", sending them a letter which called on them to change their attitude, signed by Tristan Tzara, Alejo Carpentier, César Vallejo and Juan Larrea, among others.

Once back in Chile, he published the prose poem "Fuera de aquí" (Out of Here), arguing against Italian fascism and the Italian military (who were visiting Chile at that time), as well as the poem "Gloria y Sangre" (Glory and Blood) in "Madre España: Homenaje de los poetas chilenos" (Mother Spain: Tribute of the Chilean poets). In 1938 his mother died, and he became part of the creation of the Chilean surrealist group La Mandrágora. The first meetings of the group took place in his home.

Last years edit

In 1942, Huidobro published the second editions of "Temblor de cielo", "Cagliostro" and "Mio Cid Campeador" in Santiago.

In 1944, he edited and published the first and last edition of "Actual", the final magazine he would create. In November of that year he traveled back to Europe and made a stop in Montevideo, Uruguay to give a lecture on "Introducción a la poesía" (Introduction to Poetry). In 1945 he went to Paris as a correspondent for “La Voz de América". In Paris, he received a letter from his wife Ximena informing him of her wish for a divorce. He entered Berlin (as a war correspondent) with the Allies. He was discharged and went back to Santiago with his third wife, Raquel Señoret.

In 1946 he settled in Cartagena, a seaside town in central Chile, and published a new edition of "Trois Nouvelles Exemplaires", with text written in collaboration with Jean Arp.

The following year he suffered a stroke attributed to his war wounds, and died on 2 January 1948, in his Cartagena house. According to his wishes, he was buried on a hill facing the sea. His eldest daughter Manuela and Eduardo Anguita wrote the epitaph: "Aquí yace el poeta Vicente Huidobro / Abrid la tumba / Al fondo de esta tumba se ve el mar". (Here lies the poet Vicente Huidobro / Open the tomb / At the bottom you can see the sea). That same year, Manuela published unedited texts and poems previously seen only in magazines.[10]

Huidobro wrote over thirty works, including books of poetry and poetic narrative, of which more than a dozen were published posthumously.[11]

 
Chilean poet Oscar Hahn & Maria Teresa Herreros, board members of the Vicente Huidobro Foundation

Vicente Huidobro Museum and Foundation edit

The Vicente Huidobro Foundation was created in 1990, in order to preserve the poet's works. The foundation runs a research center and archive, which is open to researchers, students and general public. On 6 April 2013 Huidobro's house in Cartagena was converted into a museum, with help of funds from FONDART. The museum, which has six rooms and a floor space of 320 square metres, will be run by the Vicente Huidobro Foundation, and will showcase manuscripts, correspondence, first editions of Huidobro's works, photographs and his collection of African art, among other items.[12]

Tribute edit

On January 10, 2020, Google celebrated his 127th birthday with a Google Doodle.[13]

The Spanglish novel Yo-Yo Boing! (1998) by Puerto Rican poet Giannina Braschi features a debate about creators and masters of Spanish and Latin American poetry, including Huidobro, Luis Cernuda, Alberti, Vicente Aleixandre, Pedro Salinas, and Jorge Guillén.[14]

Chile printed several postage stamps of portraits of Huidobro, including in 1986 and 1993.[15]

Bibliography edit

Poetry books[16]
  • Ecos del alma (Santiago: Imprenta Chide, 1911)
  • Canciones en la noche (Santiago: Imprenta Chile, 1913)
  • La gruta de silencio (Santiago: Imprenta Chile, 1913)
  • Las pagodas ocultas (Santiago: Imprenta Universitaría, 1914)
  • Adán (Santiago: Imprenta Universitaría, 1916)
  • El espejo de agua (Buenos Aires: Editorial Orión, 1916)
  • Horizon Carré (Paris: Editions Paul Birault, 1917)
  • Tour Eiffel (Madrid: Imprenta Pueyo, 1918)
  • Hallali (Madrid: Ediciones Jesús López, 1918)
  • Ecuatorial (Madrid: Imprenta Pueyo, 1918)
  • Poemas articos (Madrid: Imprenta Pueyo, 1918)
  • Saisons choisies (Paris: Editions Le Cible, 1921)
  • Automne régulier (Paris: Editions Librairie de France, 1925)
  • Tout a Coup (Paris: Editions Au Sans Pareil, 1925)
  • Altazor: el viaje en paracaídas (Madrid: Campañía Iberoamericana de Publications, 1931)
  • Temblor de Cielo (Madrid: Editorial Plutarco, 1931)
  • Ver y palpar (Santiago: Ediciones Ercilla, 1941)
  • El ciudadano del Olvido (Santiago: Ediciones Ercilla, 1941)
  • Antología de Vicente Huidobro (Santiago: Editorial Zig-Zag, 1945)
  • Ultimos Poemas (Santiago: Talleres Gráficos Ahués Hnos, 1948)
  • Poesías, edited with a prologue by Enrique Lihn (Havana: Casa de las Américas, 1968)
  • Obras Completas de Vicente Huidobro (Santiago: Editorial Zig-Zag, 1964)
  • Obras Completas de Vicente Huidobro (Santiago: Editorial Andres Bello, 1976)
English language translations
  • The Relativity of Spring: 13 poems translated from the French, translated by Michael Palmer and Geoffrey Young (Berkeley, California: Sand Dollar, 1976)
  • The Selected Poetry of Vicente Huidobro, edited by David Guss (New York: New Directions, 1981)
  • Altazor, translated by Eliot Weinberger (Saint Paul, Minnesota: Graywolf Press, 1988)
  • The Poet Is a Little God: Creationist Verse, translated by Jorge García-Gómez (Riverside, California: Xenos Books, 1990)

References edit

  1. ^ Vicente Huidobro Universidad de Chile SISIB Universidad de Chile Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades, Introducción a Vicente Huidobro, Federico Schopf
  2. ^ Musa Joven – Memoria Chilea. Algunos derechos reservados – 2014
  3. ^ Canciones en la noche 2014
  4. ^ Pasando y pasando – Memoria Chilena. Algunos derechos reservados – 2014
  5. ^ Las pagodas ocultas 2014
  6. ^ Vicente Huidobro – Encyclopedia Britannica
  7. ^ Interview, Paris 1924 "Fueron dos scouts irlandeses... Pero esto es cosa pasada" Alberto Rojas Giménez, 1924
  8. ^ Cagliostro Memoria Chilena – Algunos derechos reservados – 2014
  9. ^ The Dimensionist Manifesto The Dimensionist Manifesto. Charles Sirato, Paris, 1936
  10. ^ "Huidobro and Parra: World-Class Antipoets" Huidobro and Parra: World-Class Antipoets Dave Oliphant retrieved on February 29, 2015
  11. ^ Vicente Huidobro Biographie 2006, Green Integer retrieved on January 29, 2015
  12. ^ Vicente Huidobro Museum 2015-12-07 at the Wayback Machine retrieved in January 2015
  13. ^ "Vicente Huidobro's 127th Birthday". Google. 10 January 2020.
  14. ^ Braschi, Giannina (2011). Yo-yo boing!. Las Vegas: AmazonCrossing. p. 91. ISBN 978-1-61109-089-5. OCLC 780707905.
  15. ^ rarebooks. "Juana de Ibarbourou (1892-1979) | OPEN BOOK". Retrieved 2020-10-23.
  16. ^ "Vicente Huidobro Biographie". Green Integer. 2006. Retrieved January 29, 2015.

Sources edit

  • Perdigó, Luisa Marina (1994). The Origins of Vicente Huidobro's 'Creacionismo' (1911–1916) and its Evolution (1917–1947). New York: Mellen Press. ISBN 0773422994

External links edit

  • Finding aid for the Vicente Huidobro papers at the Getty Research Institute, contains a listing of materials and biographical information.
  • Works by Vicente Huidobro at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

vicente, huidobro, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, garcía, huidobro, second, maternal, family, name, fernández, vicente, garcía, huidobro, fernández, latin, american, spanish, biˈsente, ɣwiˈðoβɾo, january, 1893, january, 1948, chilean, poet, bor. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Garcia Huidobro and the second or maternal family name is Fernandez Vicente Garcia Huidobro Fernandez Latin American Spanish biˈsente ɣwiˈdobɾo January 10 1893 January 2 1948 was a Chilean poet born to an aristocratic family He promoted the avant garde literary movement in Chile and was the creator and greatest exponent of the literary movement called Creacionismo Creationism Vicente Garcia HuidobroVicente HuidobroBornVicente Garcia Huidobro Fernandez 1893 01 10 January 10 1893Santiago ChileDiedJanuary 2 1948 1948 01 02 aged 54 Cartagena ChileResting placeCartagenaOccupationPoetLanguageSpanishNationalityChileanEducationColegio San IgnacioAlma materUniversidad de ChilePeriodTwentieth CenturyGenrePoetryLiterary movementCreacionismoNotable worksAltazorNotable awardsMunicipality of Santiago Prize El poliedro y el mar 1963 Municipality of Santiago Prize Poesia entera 1972 Maria Luisa Bombal Prize Vina del Mar Municipality 1981 National prize of Literature CHILE 1988SpouseManuela Portales Bello 1912 Ximena Amunategui Raquel SenoretChildren5RelativesMaria Luisa Fernandez mother Signature Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Early years 1 2 Move abroad 1 3 Altazor and creacionismo 2 Back to Chile 3 Last years 4 Vicente Huidobro Museum and Foundation 5 Tribute 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksLife and work editEarly years edit Huidobro was born into a wealthy family from Santiago Chile He spent his first years in Europe and was educated by French and English governesses Once his family was back in Chile Vicente was enrolled at the Colegio San Ignacio a Jesuit secondary school in Santiago where he was expelled for wearing a ring that he claimed was a wedding ring In 1910 he studied literature at the Instituto Pedagogico of the University of Chile but a good part of his knowledge of literature and poetry came from his mother poet Maria Luisa Fernandez Bascunan She used to host tertulias or salons in the family home where sometimes up to 60 people came to talk and to listen to her talk about literature with guests including members of the family servants maids and a dwarf 1 Later in 1912 she would help him financially and emotionally to publish his first magazine Musa Joven Young Muse 2 In 1911 he published Ecos del alma Echoes of the Soul a work with modernist tones The following year he married Manuela Portales Bello In 1913 he published Canciones en la noche Songs in the Night 3 The book included some poems previously published in Musa Joven as well as his first calligram Triangulo armonico Harmonic Triangle In 1913 along with Carlos Diaz Loyola better known as Pablo de Rokha he published three issues of the magazine Azul Blue and published both Canciones en la noche and La gruta del silencio The Grotto of Silence The next year he gave a lecture Non serviam in which he reflected on his aesthetic vision The same year in Pasando y Pasando 4 Passing and Passing Vicente explained his religious doubts earning himself the reproach of both his family and the Jesuits The same year he published Las pagodas ocultas 1916 5 and signed it for the first time as Vicente Huidobro Move abroad edit In 1916 he traveled to Buenos Aires with Teresa Wilms Montt a young poet whom he had rescued from a convent While in Buenos Aires Huidobro outlined his creationism literary theory later a literary movement and published El espejo de agua The Mirror of Water Also in 1916 he moved to Europe with his wife and children While passing through Madrid he met Rafael Cansino Assens with whom he had exchanged letters since 1914 He settled in Paris and published Adan 1916 a work that began his next phase of artistic development Huidobro met and mixed with most of the Parisian avant garde of this period Pablo Picasso Juan Gris Jacques Lipchitz Francis Picabia Joan Miro Max Ernst Paul Eluard Amedeo Modigliani and Blaise Cendrars In 1917 he contributed to the magazine Nord Sud edited by Pierre Reverdy along with Guillaume Apollinaire Tristan Tzara Jean Cocteau Andre Breton Louis Aragon and Max Jacob until a disagreement with Reverdy forced him to leave the magazine That same year he published Horizon carre including poems previously shown in El espejo de agua translated to French with the help of Juan Gris In October 1918 Huidobro traveled to Madrid making the first in a series of annual trips to that city There he shared both Creacionismo and his knowledge of the Parisian vanguard with the artistic elite In Madrid Vicente met with Robert and Sonia Delaunay refugees in Spain and resumed his friendship with Rafael Cansinos Assens He started the literary movement Ultraismo corresponded with Tristan Tzara and collaborated with him on his Dadaist magazine In 1919 he brought to Madrid a rough draft of the series of poems that would eventually become his masterpiece Altazor That same year he took some science classes and became interested in esoteric subjects like astrology alchemy ancient Kabbalah among other forms of occultism While in Paris he worked with Amedee Ozenfant and Le Corbusier Charles Edouard Jeanneret Gris at L Esprit Nouveau a magazine directed by Paul Dermee There he also worked for the Spanish magazines Grecia Cervantes Tableros and Ultra In the El Liberal a Spanish newspaper journalist and literary critic Enrique Gomez Carrillo published an interview with Pierre Reverdy where he accuses Huidobro of antedating the edition of El espejo de agua and claims that he himself created creacionismo Grecia magazine took Huidobro s side and between August and September Huidobro traveled to Madrid to refute Gomez Carrillo s claims nbsp Triangulo Armonico his first calligram Altazor and creacionismo edit In 1921 Huidobro founded and edited an international art magazine Creacion Creation in Madrid The magazine featured a Lipchitz sculpture and paintings by Georges Braque Picasso Juan Gris and Albert Gleizes In November he printed a second issue in Paris titled Creation Revue d Art In December he presented his famous lecture La Poesia Poetry which served as prologue to his works Temblor de Cielo Tremor of Heaven and Saisons Choisies Chosen Seasons 6 The next year Huidobro presented his theory of Pure Creation at Branche Studio in Paris and then in Berlin and Stockholm He wrote for the Polish magazine Nowa Sztuka In Paris his Painted poems exhibition at the Theatre Edouard VII was shut down for being too disruptive In 1923 he published Finis Britannia a critique of the British empire which provoked antipathy from the British and resulted in him receiving a postcard in support from Mahatma Gandhi In 1924 he was arguably kidnapped for this reason disappearing for three days Later in an interview he briefly commented that the perpetrators of the kidnap were two Irish scouts but refused to give more details 7 Huidobro continued with his diverse artistic activities in Europe producing the third edition of Creation where he published his Manifeste peut etre Maybe Manifesto Collaborator in this edition included Tristan Tzara Rene Crevel Juan Larrea and Erik Satie He joined the French Masonic Lodge and met Spanish philosopher and writer Miguel de Unamuno who was exiled in Paris at the time In 1925 he returned to Chile where he edited and published Accion Diario de Purificacion Nacional Action Journal of National Purification a political newspaper where he criticised the state and reported fraudulent activities He was consequently assaulted and beaten outside his home and on 21 November the newspaper was shut down He started another newspaper La reforma Reform in a symbolic gesture young supporters of the progressive party declared him as their candidate for president A bomb was then set off outside his house though Huidobro escaped unharmed While in Chile he wrote for the publications Andamios Panorama and Ariel and published Automne Regulier Regular Autumn and Tout a coup Suddenly In 1926 he published a fragment of what would become the fourth canto of Altazor in Panorama In 1927 he traveled to New York where he met Charlie Chaplin Douglas Fairbanks and Gloria Swanson wrote a script for a film of his novel Cagliostro 8 and wrote the Canto a Lindbergh Song for Lindbergh dedicated to aviator Charles Lindbergh He returned to Europe by the late 1920s where he began to write the novel Mio Cid Campeador he also continued his work on Altazor and began Temblor de Cielo Tremor of Heaven It was at this time that he discovered that he was heir to the Marquisate of Casa Real He also participated in the Mandragora a Chilean surrealist movement founded in 1938 There was a scandal when he married Ximena Amunategui in a Muslim ceremony In 1930 while in the Italian Alps he wrote La Proxima The Next and published his poem Chanson de l oeuf et de l infini Song of the Egg and Infinity in the magazine Revue Europeenne and a fragment of Altazor in French in the June edition of Transition In 1931 he went back to Madrid to publish Altazor where he attended Federico Garcia Lorca s poetry recital Poet in New York and started his friendship with Uruguayan painter Joaquin Torres Garcia The same year he published Portrait of a Paladin and the English versions of his Mio Cid Campeador Temblor de Cielo and Altazor Back to Chile editHuidobro went back to Chile in 1932 under the pressure of the Great Depression In Chile he published Gilles de Raiz In 1933 he got involved with the Communist Party of Chile and published his article Manifiesto a la juventud de Hispanoamerica Manifesto to the Youth of Hispano America in Barcelona s Europa magazine where he proposed the creation of a united republic formed of Bolivia Chile Paraguay and Uruguay In 1934 he wrote film reviews for Santiago magazines and newspapers and published La Proxima The Next Santiago Walton Papa o el diario de Alicia Mir Father or the diary of Alicia Mir Santiago Walton a novel written as a diary and the play En la Luna In the Moon Santiago Ercilla He founded the magazine Vital Ombligo with Omar Caceres and Eduardo Anguita In 1935 a young Volodia Teitelboim read a Rabindranath Tagore poem similar to Poem 16 of Neruda s Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair Teitelboim mentioned this to Huidobro and Huidobro accused Neruda of plagiarism This would initiate a conflict between Neruda and Huidobro that later would involve Pablo de Rokha In 1936 along with Picasso Arp Kandinsky and Robert and Sonia Delaunay among others he signed the Dimensionist Manifesto 9 In 1937 while in Spain supporting the republican cause the conflict with Neruda resurfaced while Neruda was also supporting the republicans The Parisian Association Internationale des Ecrivains pour la Defense de la Culture sending them a letter which called on them to change their attitude signed by Tristan Tzara Alejo Carpentier Cesar Vallejo and Juan Larrea among others Once back in Chile he published the prose poem Fuera de aqui Out of Here arguing against Italian fascism and the Italian military who were visiting Chile at that time as well as the poem Gloria y Sangre Glory and Blood in Madre Espana Homenaje de los poetas chilenos Mother Spain Tribute of the Chilean poets In 1938 his mother died and he became part of the creation of the Chilean surrealist group La Mandragora The first meetings of the group took place in his home Last years editIn 1942 Huidobro published the second editions of Temblor de cielo Cagliostro and Mio Cid Campeador in Santiago In 1944 he edited and published the first and last edition of Actual the final magazine he would create In November of that year he traveled back to Europe and made a stop in Montevideo Uruguay to give a lecture on Introduccion a la poesia Introduction to Poetry In 1945 he went to Paris as a correspondent for La Voz de America In Paris he received a letter from his wife Ximena informing him of her wish for a divorce He entered Berlin as a war correspondent with the Allies He was discharged and went back to Santiago with his third wife Raquel Senoret In 1946 he settled in Cartagena a seaside town in central Chile and published a new edition of Trois Nouvelles Exemplaires with text written in collaboration with Jean Arp The following year he suffered a stroke attributed to his war wounds and died on 2 January 1948 in his Cartagena house According to his wishes he was buried on a hill facing the sea His eldest daughter Manuela and Eduardo Anguita wrote the epitaph Aqui yace el poeta Vicente Huidobro Abrid la tumba Al fondo de esta tumba se ve el mar Here lies the poet Vicente Huidobro Open the tomb At the bottom you can see the sea That same year Manuela published unedited texts and poems previously seen only in magazines 10 Huidobro wrote over thirty works including books of poetry and poetic narrative of which more than a dozen were published posthumously 11 nbsp Chilean poet Oscar Hahn amp Maria Teresa Herreros board members of the Vicente Huidobro FoundationVicente Huidobro Museum and Foundation editThe Vicente Huidobro Foundation was created in 1990 in order to preserve the poet s works The foundation runs a research center and archive which is open to researchers students and general public On 6 April 2013 Huidobro s house in Cartagena was converted into a museum with help of funds from FONDART The museum which has six rooms and a floor space of 320 square metres will be run by the Vicente Huidobro Foundation and will showcase manuscripts correspondence first editions of Huidobro s works photographs and his collection of African art among other items 12 Tribute editOn January 10 2020 Google celebrated his 127th birthday with a Google Doodle 13 The Spanglish novel Yo Yo Boing 1998 by Puerto Rican poet Giannina Braschi features a debate about creators and masters of Spanish and Latin American poetry including Huidobro Luis Cernuda Alberti Vicente Aleixandre Pedro Salinas and Jorge Guillen 14 Chile printed several postage stamps of portraits of Huidobro including in 1986 and 1993 15 Bibliography editPoetry books 16 Ecos del alma Santiago Imprenta Chide 1911 Canciones en la noche Santiago Imprenta Chile 1913 La gruta de silencio Santiago Imprenta Chile 1913 Las pagodas ocultas Santiago Imprenta Universitaria 1914 Adan Santiago Imprenta Universitaria 1916 El espejo de agua Buenos Aires Editorial Orion 1916 Horizon Carre Paris Editions Paul Birault 1917 Tour Eiffel Madrid Imprenta Pueyo 1918 Hallali Madrid Ediciones Jesus Lopez 1918 Ecuatorial Madrid Imprenta Pueyo 1918 Poemas articos Madrid Imprenta Pueyo 1918 Saisons choisies Paris Editions Le Cible 1921 Automne regulier Paris Editions Librairie de France 1925 Tout a Coup Paris Editions Au Sans Pareil 1925 Altazor el viaje en paracaidas Madrid Campania Iberoamericana de Publications 1931 Temblor de Cielo Madrid Editorial Plutarco 1931 Ver y palpar Santiago Ediciones Ercilla 1941 El ciudadano del Olvido Santiago Ediciones Ercilla 1941 Antologia de Vicente Huidobro Santiago Editorial Zig Zag 1945 Ultimos Poemas Santiago Talleres Graficos Ahues Hnos 1948 Poesias edited with a prologue by Enrique Lihn Havana Casa de las Americas 1968 Obras Completas de Vicente Huidobro Santiago Editorial Zig Zag 1964 Obras Completas de Vicente Huidobro Santiago Editorial Andres Bello 1976 English language translations The Relativity of Spring 13 poems translated from the French translated by Michael Palmer and Geoffrey Young Berkeley California Sand Dollar 1976 The Selected Poetry of Vicente Huidobro edited by David Guss New York New Directions 1981 Altazor translated by Eliot Weinberger Saint Paul Minnesota Graywolf Press 1988 The Poet Is a Little God Creationist Verse translated by Jorge Garcia Gomez Riverside California Xenos Books 1990 References edit Vicente Huidobro Universidad de Chile SISIB Universidad de Chile Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades Introduccion a Vicente Huidobro Federico Schopf Musa Joven Memoria Chilea Algunos derechos reservados 2014 Canciones en la noche 2014 Pasando y pasando Memoria Chilena Algunos derechos reservados 2014 Las pagodas ocultas 2014 Vicente Huidobro Encyclopedia Britannica Interview Paris 1924 Fueron dos scouts irlandeses Pero esto es cosa pasada Alberto Rojas Gimenez 1924 Cagliostro Memoria Chilena Algunos derechos reservados 2014 The Dimensionist Manifesto The Dimensionist Manifesto Charles Sirato Paris 1936 Huidobro and Parra World Class Antipoets Huidobro and Parra World Class Antipoets Dave Oliphant retrieved on February 29 2015 Vicente Huidobro Biographie 2006 Green Integer retrieved on January 29 2015 Vicente Huidobro Museum Archived 2015 12 07 at the Wayback Machine retrieved in January 2015 Vicente Huidobro s 127th Birthday Google 10 January 2020 Braschi Giannina 2011 Yo yo boing Las Vegas AmazonCrossing p 91 ISBN 978 1 61109 089 5 OCLC 780707905 rarebooks Juana de Ibarbourou 1892 1979 OPEN BOOK Retrieved 2020 10 23 Vicente Huidobro Biographie Green Integer 2006 Retrieved January 29 2015 Sources editPerdigo Luisa Marina 1994 The Origins of Vicente Huidobro s Creacionismo 1911 1916 and its Evolution 1917 1947 New York Mellen Press ISBN 0773422994External links editFinding aid for the Vicente Huidobro papers at the Getty Research Institute contains a listing of materials and biographical information Works by Vicente Huidobro at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vicente Huidobro amp oldid 1181499713, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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