Yolanda Pantin | |
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Born | 1954 Caracas, Venezuela |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Spanish |
Alma mater | Andrés Bello Catholic University |
Genre |
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Notable works |
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Notable awards |
Yolanda Pantin (born 1954) is a Venezuelan author who has mainly written poetry, although she has also worked in children's literature.[1]
Early life and education
Born in Caracas, the eldest of eleven siblings, she spent her childhood in Turmero, Aragua. There, she studied arts at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas (renamed, Escuela de Artes Visuales Rafael Monasterios). In 1974, she returned to Caracas to study literature at Andrés Bello Catholic University (UCAB).[2]
Career
Pantin, who is included in the literary generation of 1978, founded that year the university group "Rastros". Her first texts appeared in the magazine, which she herself illustrated. The following year, she won an honorable mention in the Francisco Lazo Martí award with Casa o lobo, her first collection of poems, which would be published in 1981 by Monte Ávila Editores.[3]
In 1979, she joined the literary workshop "Calicanto", directed by the writer Antonia Palacios, where she rubbed shoulders with various writers of her generation. In 1981, she left Calicanto and co-founded Grupo Tráfico, which broke with and questioned the nocturnal poetic approaches that prevailed in Venezuela at that time. Tráfico published a literary manifesto that criticized the poetic canons they considered outdated, which had a wide repercussion and promoted aesthetic renovation.[4][5]
In 1986, the Consejo Nacional de la Cultura awarded Pantin a creative scholarship to promote her literary projects. She also worked as a cultural journalist for the weekly Número and as co-editor of Qué Pasa. In 1989, she was one of the founders of the publishing house Pequeña Venecia, which publishes poetry. In 1990, with Santos López, she created the "Casa de la Poesía Foundation".[3]
In 2001, the María Lionza statue in Caracas was the inspiration for Pantin's poem "The pelvic bone"; in the poem, the narrator travels into Caracas for a protest and sees the statue. The image of the pelvis – its "most notable feature" – stays in the narrator's mind, and the poem goes on to address the statue directly.[6]
Pantin has been invited to book fairs and poetry festivals including the First Poetry Biennial (1991) in Val-de-Marne, France,[3] and the Moscow Poetry Biennial (2019).[7] Fond of photography, Pantin participated in the Dedicatorias exhibition held at the Fundación La Poeteca in 2019.[8] There, a selection of images she took in 2008 while making the Trans-Siberian route could be seen.[9]
Awards and honours
- 1979, Honorable Mention, Francisco Lazo Martí National Poetry Prize, for Casa o lobo
- 1982, Honorable Mention, José Rafael Pocaterra Poetry Biennial, for Correo del corazón
- 1989, Fundarte Award, for Poemas del escritor
- 1994, List of Honor, International Board on Books for Young People, for Ratón y Vampiro se conocen
- 2000, Best Book of the Year Award, children's book category, Centro Nacional del Libro de Venezuela, for ¡Splash!
- 2003, Residency at the Bellagio Study Center of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Roberto Celli Memorial Fund scholarship to carry out with Ana Teresa Torres the research project which allowed them to publish, as co-editors, El hilo de la voz. Antología crítica de escritoras venezolanas del siglo XX (Fundación Polar, 2003)
- 2004, Guggenheim Fellowship
- 2015, Poets of the Latin World Victor Sandoval Award, for her work, Seminar of Mexican Culture and UNAM[10]
- Selected for the anthology Il fiore della poesia latinoamericana d'oggi, volume 2, America meridionale - I[11]
- 2017, XVII Premio Casa de América de Poesía Americana, for Lo que hace el tiempo[12]
- 2020, XVII Premio Internacional de Poesía Federico García Lorca for her literary career[13]
Selected works
Poems
- Casa o lobo, colección Los Espacios Cálidos, Monte Ávila Editores, Caracas, 1981 (Ciencuentena de Cincuentena, 2002)
- Correo del corazón, Fundación para la Cultura y las Artes del Distrito Federal (Fundarte), Caracas, 1985
- El cielo de París, Fondo Editorial Pequeña Venecia, Caracas; 1989
- Poemas del escritor, Fundarte, Caracas, 1989
- La canción fría, Editorial Angria, Caracas, 1989
- Paya (Una elegía), Colecciones Clandestinas, Caracas, 1990
- Los bajos sentimientos, Monte Ávila Editores, Caracas, 1993
- La quietud, Pequeña Venecia, Caracas, 1998
- El hueso pélvico, Grupo Editorial Eclepsidra, Caracas, 2002
- La épica del padre, La Nave Va, Caracas, 2002
- Poemas huérfanos, La Liebre Libre, Maracay, 2002
- País, Fundación Bigott, Caracas, 2007; Frailejón Editores, Bogotá, 2021
- 21 caballos, editorial La Cámara Escrita, Caracas, 2011
- Bellas ficciones, Eclepsidra, Caracas, 2016
- Lo que hace el tiempo, Visor editorial, Madrid, 2017
- El dragón escondido, Editorial Pre-Textos, Valencia, 2021
Poetry collections/anthologies
- Poemas del escritor / El cielo de París, dos poemarios, Fundarte / Alcaldía del Municipio Libertador, Caracas, 1991
- Enemiga mía. Selección poética (1981-1997), Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert, Madrid, 1998
- Poesía reunida 1981-2002, Otero Ediciones, Caracas, 2004
- Herencia. Selección poética (1981-2004), colección Atlántica, Ediciones Idea, Canarias, 2005
- País. Poesía reunida (1981-2011), Editorial Pre-Textos, Valencia, 2014
- El ciervo, antología, compilación de Néstor Mendoza; El Taller Blanco Ediciones, Bogotá, 2019
Children's and youth literature
- Ratón y Vampiro se conocen, Monte Ávila Editores, Caracas, 1991
- Ratón y Vampiro en el castillo, illustrated by Marcela Cabrera; Monte Ávila Editores, 1998
- ¡Splash!, illustrated by Rosana Faría, Playco Editores, Caracas, 2000
- Un caballo en la ciudad, illustrated with photographs by Rosa Virgina Urdaneta, Playco Editores, Caracas, 2002
- Ratón y Vampiro, illustrated by Jefferson Quintana, Lugar Común, 2012
- Era un tren de noche, illustrated by the same author, Cyls Editores, Caracas, 2018
Non-fiction
- Quién dijo Kartofel?, with Blanca Strepponi, Magenta Ediciones, Caracas, 2006
- Marie Curie, biografía, Los Libros de El Nacional, Caracas, 2005
- Nelson Mandela, Los Libros de El Nacional, Caracas, 2006
- Viaje al poscomunismo, with Ana Teresa Torres, Eclepsidra, Caracas, 2020.
Theatre
- La otredad y el vampiro, Fundarte, Alcaldía de Caracas, 1994
References
- ↑ "Yolanda Pantin gana el Premio de Poesía García Lorca". El Nacional (in European Spanish). 15 October 2020. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ Ríos, Rubén; Borgo, Karina Sainz. "Yolanda Pantin: "La poesía puede intuir lo que aún la prosa no sabe" – Fundación" (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- 1 2 3 "pantin-yolanda-100 - Casa della poesia". casadellapoesia.org (in Italian). Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ «Literatura Venezolana: Yolanda Pantin». (22 July 2011) Literatura Venezolana.
- ↑ Arráiz Lucca, Rafael. "Tráfico y Guaire: quince años después". Literatura venezolana hoy: Historia nacional y presente urbano, edited by Karl Kohut, Frankfurt a. M., Madrid: Vervuert Verlagsgesellschaft, 1999, pp. 333-338. https://doi.org/10.31819/9783954879830-028 (in Spanish)
- ↑ Smilde, David; Hellinger, Daniel (2011). Venezuela's Bolivarian democracy: participation, politics, and culture under Chávez. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. pp. 309–311. ISBN 978-0-8223-5024-8. OCLC 703104540.
- ↑ "Bienal de Poesía en Moscú se dedica a América Latina". Circulo de Poesía (in Mexican Spanish). 1 December 2019. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ "Fundación La Poeteca consolida en 2020 su espacio expositivo – Fundación" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-06-21.
- ↑ "La poeta Yolanda Pantin expone fotografías en La Poeteca". Letralia, Tierra de Letras (in Spanish). 13 August 2019. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ "Secretaría de Cultura- Kit de prensa- Antonio Deltoro y Yolanda Pantin, ganadores del Premio Poetas del Mundo Latino Víctor Sandoval". www.cultura.gob.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ "Il fiore della poesia latinoamericana d'oggi - 2". www.raffaellieditore.com (in Italian). Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ "Galardón para la venezolana Yolanda Pantin". Perfil (in Spanish). 23 September 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ↑ González Vargas, José; Singer, Florantonia (15 October 2020). "La venezolana Yolanda Pantin gana el premio de Poesía Internacional García Lorca". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 February 2023.