Oliverio Girondo

Oliverio Girondo
Oliverio Girondo

Oliverio Girondo
Born August 17, 1891(1891-08-17)
Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Died January 24, 1967(1967-01-24) (aged 75)
Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Occupation Poet
Literary movement

[[Neo-

Surrealism]]
Spouse(s) Norah Lange

Oliverio Girondo (August 17, 1891-January 24, 1967) was an Argentine poet. He was born in Buenos Aires to a relatively wealthy family, enabling him from a young age to travel to Europe, where he studied in both Paris and England. He is perhaps most famous for his participation in the magazines (Proa, Prisma and Martín Fierro), which ushered in the arrival of ultraism, the first of the vanguardist movements to settle in Argentina.[1]

His first poems, full of color and irony, surpass the simple admiration of beauty in nature which was then a common theme, opting instead for a fuller and more interesting topic: a sort of celebration of living cosmopolitan and urbane, both praising such a lifestyle and criticizing some of the customs of its society.

Girondo was contemporary to Jorge Luis Borges, Raul González Tuñón and Macedonio Fernández and Norah Lange (who he married in 1943) who he met at a lunch banquet in 1926 held in honor of Ricardo Güiraldes. Of these authors, all also involved in the vanguardia (avant gardism) of Argentina, most identified with the Florida group in the somewhat farcical literary hostility between that group and another called Grupo Boedo. Girondo was one of the most enthusiastic animators of the ultraist movement, exerting influence over many poets of the next generation, among them Enrique Molina with whom he translated the work of Arthur Rimbaud “Una temporada en el infierno.”

Other notable peers include Pablo Neruda and Federico García Lorca with whom he began lasting friendships in 1934, era when both were to be found in Buenos Aires, capital city of Argentina. Around the year 1950 he began painting in the style of surrealism, but he never published or sold any of these works. He was buried in La Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires.

Contents

Works

  • Veinte Poemas Para Ser Leidos En El Tranvia; Calcomanias; Y Otros Poemas (Coleccion Visor de poesia) (Spanish Edition). Buenos Aires: Visor. 1922. ISBN 978-84-7522-242-4. 
  • Calcomanías [Stickers] (1925)
  • Espantapájaros [Scarecrow] (1932), translated in the collection Scarecrow and Other Anomalies by Gilbert Alter-Gilbert, together with "Interlunio," selected poems and prose poems (Xenos Books).
  • Interlunium (1937)
  • Persuasion De Los Dias (Biblioteca Clasica Y Contemporanea) (Spanish Edition). Losada. 1942. ISBN 978-950-03-0462-7. 
  • Campo nuestro [Countryside of ours] (1946)
  • En la masmédula [In the masmédula] (1957) . ISBN 9780941073257. 

The last of these, "In the masmédula", his final book was an earnest attempt at absolute expression. Enrique Molina comments: “The very structure of the language he uses suffers the impact of an entirely unfettered poetic energy in this truly unique book. To the point that the words themselves begin to lack separation between them, blurring which are individuals, groups, or other units of comprehension more complex still, he presents a specie of superwords with multiple connotations and multitudinous functions which proceed in a manner tailored just as much to their phonetic associations as to their semantic meaning.” Some critics relate this ultimate gesture of vanguardia (avant gardism) to the work of another, equally desperate constructor and destroyer of language and semanticity: “Trilce”, of the Peruvian author of the same era, César Vallejo.

Trivia

Girondo's works are the backbone of The Dark Side of the Heart, a 1992 independent film directed by Eliseo Subiela, in which a poet strives to find the love of his life, defying Death's constant interventions.

References

External links


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Oliverio Girondo — Nacimiento 17 de agosto de 1891 Buenos Aires …   Wikipedia Español

  • Oliverio Girondo — (* 17. August 1891 in Buenos Aires; † 24. Januar 1967 ebenda) war ein argentinischer Journalist und Schriftsteller. Girondo stammte aus einer sehr wohlhabenden Familie. Bereits in seiner Kindheit war er mit seinen Eltern auf Reisen, u.a. besuchte …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Oliverio Girondo — Oliverio Girondo, poeta argentino (Buenos Aires, 1891 1967). Participó en revistas que señalaron la llegada del ultraísmo, la primera vanguardia que se desarrolló en el país, con las revistas Proa , Prisma y Martín Fierro , en las que también… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Girondo — Girondo, Oliverio …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Girondo, Oliverio — ► (1891 1967) Poeta vanguardista argentino. Obras: Calcomanías y Campo nuestro, entre otras. * * * (17 ago. 1891, Buenos Aires, Argentina–24 ene. 1967, Buenos Aires). Escritor, pintor y poeta argentino. Durante su juventud, la posición acomodada… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Vizconde de Lascano Tegui — Vida Emilio Lascano Tegui. Escritor, periodista y artista plástico argentino (Concepción del Uruguay, 1887 Buenos Aires, 1966). Hacia 1908 decide transformar su apellido de origen vasco (Lascanotegui) en uno doble (Lascano Tegui) y, al año… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Хирондо, Оливерио — Оливерио Хирондо исп. Oliverio Girondo …   Википедия

  • Хирондо — Хирондо, Оливерио Оливерио Хирондо исп. Oliverio Girondo Дата рождения: 17 октября …   Википедия

  • Norah Lange — (eigentlich: Berta Nora Lange Erfjord, * 23. Oktober 1905 in Buenos Aires; † 4. August 1972 in Buenos Aires) war eine argentinische Schriftstellerin. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werk 2.1 Gesamtausgabe …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Raul Gonzalez Tunon — Raúl González Tuñón Pour les articles homonymes, voir González. Raúl González Tuñón (Buenos Aires, 29 mars 1905 – 14 août 1974) fut un poète argentin. Correspondant de guerre au Chaco et en Espagne pendant la Guerre civile, il fit partie de l… …   Wikipédia en Français

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