Luís Salvador Efraín Salazar Arrué

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Luís Salvador Efraín Salazar Arrué , also Salarrué , (born October 22, 1899 in Sonsonate , † November 27, 1975 in Los Planes de Renderos San Salvador ) was a Salvadoran author and painter .

Life

His parents were María Teresa Arrué and Joaquín Salazar Angulo. Around 1915 he attended a drawing school run by Spiro Rossolino with his cousin, the caricaturist Toño Salazar. In 1916 he received a scholarship from the Carlos Meléndez government . Salazar went to Danville School in Virginia . From 1916 to 1919 Salazar studied at the Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington, DC and then returned to El Salvador. In 1919 he held his first picture exhibition in Hisada's gallery . In 1919 he was the representative of the Cruz Roja de El Salvador in San Marcos.

In 1922 he married the Salvadoran painter Zélie Lardé y Arthés. Her daughters, who also became visual artists, are: María Teresa (Maya), Olga Teresa and Aída Estela. In 1926 Salazar joined the Asociación de Periodistas de El Salvador . From 1928 to 1935 he was the editor of the newspaper Patria of Alberto Masferrer and Alberto Guerra Trigueros (1898–1950), the daily illustrated Vivir . To fill the pages Salazar published his Cuentos de Cipotes , which were published in book form in 1961 by Italo López Vallecillos.

La Casa del Escritor

In 2003 his house was acquired and restored by the Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes de El Salvador (CONCULTURA). Which today houses the La Casa del Escritor, a project for young writers.

Publications

  • El Cristo negro, novel 1926
  • El señor de La Burbuja, novel 1927
  • O'Yarkandal, short story, 1929
  • Remontando el Uluán, short story, 1932
  • Cuentos de barro, short story, 1934
  • El libro desnudo, short story, 1936
  • Eso y más, story, 1940,
  • Cuentos de cipotes at the edición parcial 1943 and complete edition 1961.
  • Trasmallo story, 1954
  • La espada y otras narraciones stories, 1960
  • La sed de Sling Bader novel, 1971
  • Catleya luna, novel, 1974
  • Mundo nomasito, poetry, 1975

The first editions of Cuentos de Cipotes were illustrated by his wife Zélie Lardé and the following by his daughter Maya. Some editions of Cuentos de Barro contain spontaneous illustrations by José Mejía Vides.

Secondary literature

  • Maria Tenorio, La alfarería de la cultura nacional essay , 1999

Individual evidence

  1. es: Toño Salazar
  2. El Diario de Hoy, June 25, 2006, Salarrué, El último señor de los mares
  3. Roselia Núñez, Salarrué: un clásico de los años 20
  4. ^ Es : Italo López Vallecillos
  5. Angel Flores, Narrativa hispanoamericana 1816-1981: historia y antología , Siglo XXI, 1981, 439 SS 247
  6. scribd, Salazar-Arrue-Salvador-Salarrue-Cuentos-de-Barro
  7. scribd, Salarrue-Salazar-Arrue-Salvador-Cuentos-de-Cipotes
  8. scribd, Salarrue-y-Cuentos-de-barro-Ensayo

Web links