The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Thursday, May 23, 2013
 
Mexican novelist, essayist, and driving force in Latin America's novel-writing boom, Carlos Fuentes, dies
Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes greets the audience during a conference of Peru's Nobel Literature Prize laureate Mario Vargas Llosa in Mexico City, Thursday, March 3, 2011.In this Thursday, March 3, 2011.file photo, Mexican author Carlos Fuentes greets the audience during a conference of Peru's Nobel Literature Prize laureate Mario Vargas Llosa in Mexico City. Fuentes, Mexico's most celebrated novelist and among Latin America's most prominent authors, died on May 15, 2012. AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File.

By: Adriana Gomez Licon, Associated Press

MEXICO CITY (AP).- Author Carlos Fuentes, who played a dominant role in Latin America's novel-writing boom by delving into the failed ideals of the Mexican revolution, died Tuesday in a Mexico City hospital. He was 83.

Mexico's National Council for Culture for the Arts confirmed the death of Mexico's most celebrated novelist. The cause was not immediately known, said the culture official, who was not authorized to speak to the media.

Mexican media reported Fuentes died at the Angeles del Pedregal hospital, where he was being treated for heart problems. The loss was immediately mourned worldwide via Twitter and across Mexican airwaves.

A message on President Felipe Calderon's Twitter account said "I deeply lament the death of our beloved and admired Carlos Fuentes, a universal Mexican writer."

Fuentes himself tweeted only one day, March 19, 2011, his last saying: "There must be something beyond slaughter and barbarism to support the existence of mankind and we must all help search for it."

The prolific Fuentes wrote his first novel, "Where the Air is Clear," at age 29, laying the foundation for a boom in Spanish contemporary literature during the 1960s and 1970s. He published an essay on the change of power in France in the newspaper Reforma on Tuesday, the same day he died.

His generation of writers, including Colombia's Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Peru's Mario Vargas Llosa, drew global readership and attention to Latin American culture during a period when strongmen ruled much of the region.

"The Death of Artemio Cruz," a novel about a post-revolutionary Mexico that failed to keep its promise of narrowing social gaps, brought Fuentes international notoriety.

The elegant, mustachioed author's other contemporary classics included "Aura," ''Terra Nostra," and "The Good Conscience." Many American readers know him for "The Old Gringo," a novel about San Francisco journalist Ambrose Bierce, who disappeared at the height of the 1910-1920 Mexican Revolution. That book was later made into a film starring Gregory Peck and Jane Fonda.

Fuentes was often mentioned as a candidate for the Nobel prize but never won one. A busy man, Fuentes wrote plays and short stories and co-founded a literary magazine. He was also a columnist, political analyst, essayist and critic.

And he was outspoken. Once considered a Communist and sympathizer of Cuba's Fidel Castro, Fuentes was denied entry into the U.S. under the McCarren-Walter Act. Having some of his childhood in the U.S. as the son of Mexican diplomat, he said it grated on him that his left-of-center politics meant he often was portrayed as anti-American. He was often critical of American governments and of a rich country that should attend to its poor, but not of Americans and American culture.

"To call me anti-American is a stupendous lie, a calumnia. I grew up in this country. When I was a little boy I shook the hand of Franklin Roosevelt and I haven't washed it since," he said with characteristic good humor.

More recently, as a moderate leftist, Fuentes strongly opposed harsh policies against immigration and the war on terrorism in the U.S, though he expressed deep affection for the United States. He warned about Mexico's religious right but also blasted Venezuela's Hugo Chavez as a "Tropical Mussolini."

He also was very critical of Mexico's drug violence that has killed more than 47,500 people since 2006, something he blamed on a failed policy by Calderon to attack organized crime.

Described by Mexican cultural officials as the country's most distinguished living author, Fuentes in 1987 won the Cervantes Prize, the Spanish-speaking world's highest literary honor.

Fuentes also was named a commander of the National Order of Merit, France's highest civilian award given to a foreigner, in 1997. Spain gave him a Prince of Asturias Award for literature in 1994.

Throughout his life, Fuentes also taught courses at Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and Brown universities in the United States.

The son of a career diplomat, Fuentes himself served as an ambassador to England. He resigned from Mexico's foreign service in protest over Mexico's 1968 student massacre, but returned to serve as ambassador to Paris beginning in 1975.

Fuentes resigned from the foreign service again in 1977 when former President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz was appointed ambassador to Spain, saying he wouldn't serve with the man who ordered the student massacre in Mexico City, which activists said killed up to 350 people.

A believer that literature allowed him to say what would be censored otherwise, Fuentes also was the subject of censorship.

His mystery novel "Aura," which narrates a romantic encounter beneath a crucifix with a black Christ that some officials claimed was too racy, was banned from public high schools in Puerto Rico. It also sparked controversy in Mexico in 2001 when a former interior secretary asked the novel to be dropped from a suggested reading list at his daughter's private junior high school.

Fuentes was born in Panama City on Nov. 11, 1928 to Mexican parents. He lived most of his life abroad, growing up in Montevideo, Uruguay; Rio de Janeiro; Washington, D.C.; Santiago, Chile; and Buenos Aires, Argentina. He later divided his time between homes in Mexico City home and London, where he did most of his writing.

Fuentes was married from 1959 to 1973 to actress Rita Macedo, with whom he had his only surviving daughter.

After the couple divorced, Fuentes married journalist Silvia Lemus and they had two children together. Their son Carlos Fuentes Lemus died from complications associated with hemophilia in 1999, and Natasha Fuentes Lemus died in 2005 after a cardiac arrest.

Fuentes also acknowledged having affairs with actresses including Jeanne Moreau and Jean Seberg.

As he grew older, Fuentes left many novels unfinished with imperfections and "wounds that make the book bleed," he said.

But Fuentes said in 2008 that he agreed with Mario Vargas Llosa to gather 12 writers, including Garcia Marquez, to each create a piece about their favorite dictator.

Fuentes wrote a 2008 opera inspired by Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, the five-time president of Mexico during the Texas Revolution.

He said he wanted to see the man he considered the most flamboyant character in Mexican political history dancing and singing with his wooden leg.

He continue to publish essays and do public speaking to the very end, including the day he died. In an opinion piece in the Reforma, he expressed hope for the new government of Francois Hollande who was sworn in Tuesday as president of France.

But Fuentes always postponed writing about himself.

"One puts off the biography like you put off death," he said. "To write an autobiography is to etch the words on your own gravestone."


Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

May 15, 2012

First exhibition in Spain dedicated to David Hockney's landscapes opens in Bilbao

Tomás Saraceno creates bold vision for aerial urban living at Metropolitan Museum

Modern & Contemporary Art Auction in Philadelphia achieves nearly $2 million at Freeman's

Restored 17th century Japanese scrolls go on display at Chester Beatty Library, Dublin Castle

Sale of personal collection of one of the most important jewellers of the 20th century realizes $3,459,307

Sotheby's May 2012 African, Oceanic and Pre-Columbian Art Sales bring $17.7 million

Spring Auction of the Hermann Historica oHG successfully completed with pleasing results

Four museums shortlisted in running to win £100,000 Art Fund Prize for "museum of the year"

Summer exhibition features contemporary sculptures by nine renowned artist

Amon Carter Museum receives $75,000 digitization grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities

Houston lawyer Joe Gutheinz on quest to identify and find missing moon rocks

Santa Fe festival will honor Navajo artist

World Monuments Fund announces $1 million award for preservation effort at six historic sites

Ooh, aah: Take in Yosemite views - by computer

Michael Jackson costumes to be exhibited, sold

May 14, 2012

Czech Art Nouveau gem by Alfons Mucha goes on view at the National Gallery in Prague

Surrealist masterpiece by Roberto Matta to be offered at Christie's Latin American sale

Some of the most iconic artists of the 20th century included in Impressionist and Modern art sale at Sotheby's

Ai Weiwei's massive Fragments on view at the Smithsonian's Arthur M. Sackler Gallery

Important printed books and Americana from The Albert H. Small Collection at Christie's New York

Exhibition of rare, early salt prints on view at James Hyman Photography in London

Visions of Enlightenment: Buddhist Art at the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology

Smithsonian temporary exhibit examines the design history of Apple co-founder

Marc Quinn opens major exhibition of his works at the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco

Light Sensitive: Aargauer Kunsthaus exhibition presents works from its collection

Pieces, pattern Lines, collage: An exhibition from the collection of the Valencian Institute for Modern Art

Aperture Foundation celebrates its sixtieth anniversary with Robert Delpire exhibitions

New Museum presents largest exhibition in New York ever of works by Tacita Dean

Flora and Fauna: 400 years of artists inspired by nature at the National Gallery of Canada

Solo exhibitions by Chitra Ganesh and Simone Leigh on view at Tilton Gallery

Rare and spectacular Kashmir sapphire brings $527,500 to lead Heritage Auctions' $4.1+ million jewelry event

First exhibition of Laurie Anderson's paintings in New York opens

Hans Josephsohn has first solo exhibition in Ireland at Lismore Castle Arts

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait prize 2012 call for entries opens and new commission announced

Nationalmuseum in Stokholm announces Gripsholm Castle opens for the season

May 13, 2012

Fondation Beyeler presents first Jeff Koons exhibition ever held in a Swiss museum

British artist Antony Gormley's 'suicide' statues atop central Sao Paulo roofs give fright

Pace/MacGill Gallery exhibition celebrates the life and work of Robert Delpire

Sotheby's to sell the most important portraits of the Dora Maar period to be offered at auction in France since 1998

Getty Research Institute launches free online search gateway to the world's art libraries

Ensemble of historic documents, books, letters and poems featured at Sotheby's sale Books & Manuscripts

Sotheby's London sales of Modern & Post War British art realise a combined total of £7,719,650

In Egypt turmoil, thieves hunt pharaonic treasures; authorities scramble to prevent smuggling

Major exhibition of recent works by Chakaia Booker opens at Marlborough Gallery

Personal sculptures and drawings by Jane McAdam Freud on view at Gazelli Art House

After four days of lively sales, seventh edition of Pulse New York 2012 art fair closes

Kunsthalle Mainz presents a major solo exhibition of the artist Michael Kalmbach

New York City spring art auctions at Christie's and Sotheby's abound in records

Historic battleship becoming naval museum in Southern California

Retrospective exhibition of contemporary art by Ilona Sochynsky opens at The Ukrainian Museum

Biennial art festival transforms Cuban capital

Dior exhibit traces 60 years of cinema

Estonia to open maritime museum in seaplane hangar

May 12, 2012

Daniel Buren brings the Grand Palais' ceiling for the first time, literally, down to earth

Diego Rivera, Wilfredo Lam, and Armando Reverón lead Latin American Art sale at Sotheby's

Survey of works on paper by Lucian Freud on view at Acquavella Galleries in New York

Barbara Buhler Lynes resigns her positions at the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum

New Museum presents first large-scale, focused survey of work by Swedish artist Klara Lidén

Nina Poppe presents photographs of legendary fisherwomen from Japanese island

Investors pay record $850,000 for Batman comic book in private transaction by Heritage Auctions

Veteran dealer Paul Fraser to launch online auction company with May 24 sale of investment-grade collectibles

Most comprehensive one man exhibition to date of Belgian artist Kris Martin opens at Aargauer Kunsthaus

Jerry Garcia stage-played guitar tops Bonhams May Visions of Garcia Auction

Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg acquires major American painting by Fletcher Martin

Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia shows southern folk art

Slow Art: Technique, materials and painstaking processes take centre stage at Nationalmuseum

New and unique web community for artists will help reduce the ease of copyright infringement

North American Landscape: Kew at the British Museum

Brazilian rarities realize respective $138,000 prices to lead Heritage Auctions $8.8+ million World Coin Event

Eiffel or eyesore? London's Orbit tower completed

Vancouver Art Gallery opens Yang Fudong: Fifth Night

Indianapolis Museum of Art receives a grant to digitize Miller House and Garden archive materials

May 11, 2012

Archaeologists find ancient Mayan workshop for astronomers in northeastern Guatemala

Dublin showcases earliest photos of baby-faced U2 by photographer Patrick Brocklebank

Unemployed Ohio man's luck changes with signed Pablo Picasso print found in local thrift store

Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam unveils new willow watercolor; first addition in five years

Sayed Haider Raza's masterpiece La Forge to make its auction debut at Sotheby's

Exhibition of new work by British artist Richard Deacon opens at Lisson Gallery in London

Lichtenstein, Lowry and Chagall among the highlights of the exhibition programme for 2013 at Tate

Solo exhibition of new work by Ari Marcopoulos opens at Marlborough Chelsea

Larger than Life: René Burri's most iconic and celebrated works at Atlas Gallery

Exhibition of lithographs, etchings and mixed media works by Henry Moore opens at Steven Vail Fine Arts

Art hub of Asia to welcome tens of thousands of stakeholders at International Art Festival, ART HK 12

Dramatic suspended sculptures of operatic costumes by artist E.V. Day exhibited at the Meadows Museum

5th Annual Luminaria: San Antonio's largest art fest attracts even more visitors this year

Court rules for Kevin Costner in sculpture appeal

"From Rossetti to Voysey: Arts & Crafts Stamped Book Cover Design" opens at Blackwell

James Clarkson explores the relationships between art and the history of design at Rod Barton Gallery

Bonhams to sell 252 year old wine glass that recalls bloody business of legal piracy on the high seas

'Pure Chinese' bronze earns 25 times its high estimate at Sterling Associates' estate art and antiques auction

Contemporary Chinese artist Zheng Chongbin exhibits at Flo Peters Gallery in Hamburg

May 10, 2012

Roy Lichtenstein's "Sleeping Girl" fetches $44,882,500 breaking a record for the artist

Christie's to sell painting by Miguel Covarrubias formerly in the collection of Helena Rubinstein

One of Spain's most prestigious architects, Rafael Moneo, wins Asturias prize

A new generation of wealthy Asians build their own art museums to display collections they've amassed

Frieze New York 2012: Widespread acclaim for inaugural edition; visitor numbers in the region of 45,000

Bortolami presents New York-based visual and performance artist Jutta Koether's The Fifth Season

Major exhibition of new work by artist Jason Martin set to open at Lisson Gallery in London

Exhibition of recent photogenic drawings by Marco Breuer on view at Von Lintel

New Museum presents first New York solo exhibition of work by sculptor Phyllida Barlow

Picasso, Modigliani and Warhol among luminaries in Heritage Auctions Modern & Contemporary Art event

Smash hit documentary "Gerhard Richter Painting" to have its Los Angeles premiere on May 31 at LACMA

Art Greenwich, to be held May 25th – 28th, promises a "next-generation" experience for collectors

Robert Rauschenberg Foundation announces inaugural Creative Director for its Captiva Artist Residency

Green Art Gallery introduces the works of renowned eastern European artists to the region

Los Angeles Modern Auctions sets record prices for local and international artists

National Gallery of Canada presents an exhibition dedicated to Arnaud Maggs

National Museum of African Art presents "Lalla Essaydi: Revisions"

Brooklyn Museum publishes catalogue of more than 100 highlights from works acquired in the past decade

Some Chicago museums to close 3 days for NATO summit

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Jackson Pollock work "Number 19, 1948" sells for record $58.4 million at Christie's

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Belize City officials say ancient thirty-meter high Mayan pyramid razed for road fill

4.- Hidden drawings from Nazi concentration camp on display at Jewish Museum in Berlin

5.- Records fall at Sotheby's contemporary art auction; Barnett Newman painting sells for $43.84M

6.- Death mask of Napoleon to be auctioned at Bonhams' Book, Map and Manuscript sale

7.- New Yorkers unnerved by neighbor's voyeuristic photos on view at Julie Saul Gallery

8.- Rare Vincent Van Gogh sketchbook copies up for unprecedented sale at museum store and online

9.- Leonardo DiCaprio environmental art auction at Christie's New York tops $38 million

10.- Hong Kong cries fowl as giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman deflates



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site