Vicent Andrés Estellés

Vicent Andrés Estellés

Bronze statue representing Vicent Andrés Estellés located in Emilio Castelar square, in Burjassot
Born (1924-09-04)September 4, 1924
Burjassot, Valencia, Spain
Died March 27, 1993(1993-03-27) (aged 68)
Valencia, Spain
Occupation Journalist and poet
Language Catalan
Nationality Valencian
Notable works Llibre de meravelles (Book of Marvels)

Vicent Andrés Estellés (Valencian pronunciation: [biˈsɛn anˈdɾes esteˈʎes]) (4 September 1924 in Burjassot, Valencia – 27 March 1993 in Valencia) was a Spanish journalist and poet. He is considered one of the main renovators of modern Catalan poetry, with a similar role to that of Ausiàs March or Joan Roís de Corella in earlier periods.

Exhibition about the life and works of Estellés in Convento del Carmen (Carmen's Convent), Valencia, 2013

Biography

Vicent Andrés Estellés was twelve years old when the Spanish Civil War broke out. During its course, he trained to become both a baker and a goldsmith, and learned to write on a typewriter. The war had a profound impact on his work, in which death is a recurring theme.

Estellés spent his teenage years in Valencia, where he developed an interest in literature. During that period, he was most influenced by Charles Baudelaire, Pablo Neruda, Paul Éluard, Cesare Pavese, and Walt Whitman, Catalan poets such as Màrius Torres, Jacint Verdaguer, Josep Carner, Carles Riba, Santiago Rusiñol and Joan Salvat-Papasseit, as well as the Valencian poet Ausiàs March and the Balearic poet Bartomeu Rosselló-Pòrcel.

In 1942, at the age of 18, Estellés moved to Madrid to study for a degree in Journalism. Three years later, he left to do his military service in Navarre. At the age of 24, he moved back to Valencia and became a journalist for the newspaper Las Provincias. He befriended Joan Fuster, Xavier Casp and Manuel Sanchis i Guarner[1] – all three of them well-known Valencian writers – and met Isabel, who would later influence his writings as well.

In 1955 Estellés married Isabel. The couple had a daughter, who died when she was four months old. After the death, which Estellés recalled in Coral romput, death became a recurring theme in his works.

In 1958 he became editor-in-chief of Las Provincias, only to be dismissed for political reasons in 1978,[2] thus being forced into early retirement at the age of 54. This allowed him to devote himself entirely to writing and engaging in a variety of cultural activities, such as art exhibitions. That same year, Estellés was awarded the Premi d'Honor de les Lletres Catalanes. In 1984 he was awarded the Premi d'Honor de les Lletres Valencianes.

Estellés spent a few years in Benimodo, a municipality in the comarca of Ribera Alta, in the Valencian Community. During this period, he combined poetry with prose in his works. He received several awards in the 1990s, including the Premis Octubre.

Works

Graffiti quoting the first words of a famous poem by Vicent Andrés Estellés (Els Poblets, 2012)

The works of Vicent Andrés Estellés, one of the most important Catalan-language poets of the 20th century, are diverse and extensive. Although he is better known for his poetry, he also wrote novels, plays, screenplays, as well as his memoirs. The main themes of his work are death and sex, and they are always dealt with from a popular, everyday, simple, direct, and even vulgar perspective.[3] It is difficult to categorize his entire work. In fact, some works were reworked from books or private notes such as "Manuscrits de Burjassot" (the Manuscripts from Burjassot), "Cançoner" (Anthology) or "Mural del País Valencià" (Mural of the Valencian Country), from which he only published extracts or the poems he considered most appropriate.

His first publications were "Ciutat a cau d'orella" (Whispered City) (1953), "La nit" (The Night) (1956), "Donzell amarg" (Bitter Youth) (1958) and "L'amant de tota la vida" (The Lifelong Lover) (1966), which are only a small selection of what he had written at that point.

From the 1970s onwards, he published more frequently and received numerous awards. He published "Lletres de canvi" (Bills of Exchange)(1970), "Primera audició" (First Audition) (1971), "L'inventari clement" (The Clement Inventory) (1971). In (1971) he published two major works: "La clau que obri tots els panys" (The Key That Opens All Locks) (which contained "Coral Romput" (Broken Coral)) and the best-seller "Llibre de les meravelles"[1] (Book of Marvels), perhaps his most famous work.

From that moment onwards, Estellés began to gain recognition and published his Complete Works, including "Recomane tenebres" (I Would Recommend the Dark) (1972), "Les pedres de l'àmfora" (The Stones from the Amphora) (1974), "Manual de conformitats" (Manual of Conformities) (1977), "Balanç de Mar" (Swing of the Sea) (1978), "Cant temporal" (Temporary Singing) (1980), "Les homilies d'Organyà" (Homilies of Organyà) (1981) which includes "Coral romput", "Versos para Jackeley" (Verses for Jackeley) (1983), "Vaixell de vidre" (Glass Ship) (1984), "La lluna de colors" (Colourful Moon) (1986), y "Sonata d'Isabel" (Isabel’s Sonata) (1990).

His most important prose works are "El coixinet" (The Little Cushion) (1988), his play "L'oratori del nostre temps" (The Oratory of Our Times) (1978), and his memoirs: "Tractat de les maduixes" (Strawberry Treaty) (1985), "Quadern de Bonaire" (Bonaire’s Notebook) (1985), and "La parra boja" (The Crazy Vine) (1988).

Aesthetics

The three levels of oppression that are evident in his works are the reason why Estellés's aesthetics have been described as "irate".

Some of his most frequently recurring topics are death, love and eroticism, hunger and political oppression, as well as daily life. Put together, these themes provide a considerable formal and tonal variety.

Recognition

In 1993, he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Valencia.[4]

Awards

The most important awards he received are:

Statues and streets

In several towns in the Valencian Community, Streets have been named after Estellés.

There is also a bronze statue in Emilio Castelar square, in Burjassot, Andrés Estellés's birthplace. This piece, showing him sitting on a park bench, writing on top of a pile of books, has suffered four loutish attacks. For instance, it was covered in blue paint and the arms of his glasses were broken.[5] Likewise, extreme right blavers attempted to destroy a bust of Estellés that was put up in Burjassot in 1979.[6]

Works set to music

Estellés is one of the most popular Catalan-language poets among musicians. His works have been set to music several times, mostly by Ovidi Montllor. Montollor's version of the poem "Els Amants" (The Lovers) is especially remarkable — it has been performed live on many occasions. Other singers, singer-songwriters, or groups that have also set his works to music are Paco Muñoz, Celdoni Fonoll, Maria del Mar Bonet, Obrint Pas, Remigi Palmero, Vicent Torrent, Miquel Lluis, Els pavesos, Lluis the Sifoner, and Esteve Ferre.

References

  1. 1 2 Autores: Vicent Andrés Estellés, in letrA, Catalan Literature Online (Open University of Catalonia) (Spanish).
  2. Una aproximació a Vicent Andrés Estellés.
  3. Su poesía parte de unos elementos bien determinados: el mundo cotidiano y sus aspectos más vulgares, el diálogo con algunos autores predilectos (Ausiàs March, Garcilaso, Horacio, Cátulo y los poetas catalanes desde Carles Riba y Foix hasta Espriu y Ferrater) la vindicación de un pueblo y de una lengua sometidos al silencio y, por encima de todo, la necesidad obsesiva de escribir para dejar constancia del mundo y de la experiencia del poeta, de catalogar la realidad en forma de palabras, y la exaltación de las relaciones eróticas como motivación básica de esta vida y único enfrentamiento significativo con la muerte". (Francesc Parcerisas, quoted in Reciclatge (Nivell superior), page 230.
  4. Acto de Investidura como Doctor “Honoris Causa” del Excm. Sr. Dr. Vicent Andrés Estellés. University of Valencia, 1993.
  5. "La estatua de Estellés en Burjassot sufre un nuevo acto vandálico". Levante. Prensa Ibérica. 16 May 2013. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  6. "Vicent Andrés Estellés". Culturcat. Generalitat of Catalonia. Retrieved 7 December 2013.

Bibliography

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