Ricardo Pau-Llosa | |
|---|---|
| Born | May 17, 1954 (1954-05-17) (age 71) |
| Occupation(s) | Poet, art critic |
Ricardo Pau-Llosa (born May 17, 1954 inHavana,Cuba, lived in theUnited States since December 1960) is aCuban-American poet, art critic ofLatin American art in the US andEurope, art collector, and author of short fiction.
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Pau-Llosa was born into a working-class family inHavana. In 1960 Pau-Llosa fled Cuba with his parents, older sister, and maternal grandmother — all of whom emerge in his autobiographical poems of exile and remembrance. He graduated fromBelén Jesuit Preparatory High School inMiami in 1971, and went on to major inEnglish (literature) at various universities, among themFlorida International University (BA, 1974),Florida Atlantic University (MA, 1976), and theUniversity of Florida (1978–1981).
Following his gradation from Belen Jesuit and during his studies in Florida International University, Pau-Llosa was active in the establishment of the early Latin American art market in South Florida. He frequently visited early Latin art venues such as thePermuy andBacardi galleries.[1] He published his first book of poetry,Sorting Metaphors (Anhinga Press, 1983), won the first national Anhinga Prize for Poetry selected by William Stafford.[2] He published a second book of poetry inBread of the Imagined (Bilingual Press, 1992). His third book of poems,Cuba (Carnegie Mellon U Press, 1993), was nominated for thePulitzer Prize. His latest collections areMastery Impulse (2003) andParable Hunter (2008), both fromCarnegie Mellon.
Ricardo Pau-Llosa and Enrico Mario Santí have published a bilingual volume of poetry, "Intruder between Rivers/Intruso entre rios", with Pau-Llosa's English originals and Santí's translations of "Cuban" poems which present bilingual poetry with Cuban or Cuban exile themes casting Pau-Llosa's elegant English prosody into the original Cuban Spanish of both memory and daily experience. This book collects 25 of Cuban American poet Ricardo Pau-Llosa's excellent poems along with its translations into Cuban Spanish by poet-scholar Enrico Mario Santí.
Pau-Llosa has also been active in the world of the visual arts, as a writer, curator, and collector. He has amassed a significant collection of works by artists from across the Western Hemisphere. The confluence of his activities as a poet and art critic was the subject of a 2010 exhibition at theSnite Museum of Art at theUniversity of Notre Dame,Parallel Currents: Highlights of the Ricardo Pau-Llosa Collection of Latin American Art.[3] Included were works byJesús Soto, Enrique Castro-Cid,Rogelio Polesello,Olga de Amaral,José Bedia,Arnaldo Roche Rabell,Julio Rosado del Valle,Wilson Bigaud,Rafael Coronel,Maria Brito,Alexander Gregoire, Marcelo Bordese, Miguel Ronsino, Nicolás Leiva,Fernando de Szyszlo,Agustín Cárdenas,Agustín Fernández,Antonio Henrique Amaral, Miguel Von Dangel, Melquiades Rosario Sastre, Ana Isabel Martén, Ricardo Avila, Juan José Molina, Carlos Rojas,Marta Minujín,José Mijares, and Paul Sierra.[4]
Pau-Llosa’s collection also includes works by North American artists Leon Kelly,Clarence Holbrook Carter, Lew Wilson, Ronald González, and Christopher Mangiaracina, as well asCuban Vanguardia (modernist) artistsMario Carreño,Cundo Bermúdez,Amelia Peláez, Raúl Milián,Víctor Manuel, Guido Llinás,Raúl Martinez,Rafael Soriano, andEmilio Sánchez.[5]
Over the years, Pau-Llosa has also donated artworks to various museums, among them the Snite Museum, TheDenver Art Museum, and theBlanton Museum of Art at theUniversity of Texas.[4][6][7]