Ester Xargay Melero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1960-04-12)12 April 1960
Died19 January 2024(2024-01-19) (aged 63)
Occupation
  • Poet
  • video artist
  • translator
  • cultural agitator
LanguageCatalan, French
Ester Xargay Melero
Xargay in 2012
Xargay in 2012
Born(1960-04-12)12 April 1960
Died19 January 2024(2024-01-19) (aged 63)
Occupation
  • Poet
  • video artist
  • translator
  • cultural agitator
LanguageCatalan, French
Alma materUniversity of Barcelona
Notable worksDesintegrar-se
Notable awardsPremi de poesia catalana "Cadaqués a Rosa Leveroni"

Ester Xargay Melero (Sant Feliu de Guíxols, 12 April 1960 – Palamós, 19 January 2024)[1] was a Catalan poet, video artist, translator and cultural agitator.[2][3] She was also active in writing novels, essays, and translations.[4] Experimentation always marked her singular work, both poetic and audiovisual, through which she addressed topics such as late capitalism, sexism, environmental destruction, and repression by the Spanish state.[5]

Ester Xargay Melero spent her adolescence and youth between Paris and Bourges, and returned to the Catalan Countries when she was 18 to study art history at the University of Barcelona. She soon became interested in the link between the visual arts and poetry.[6]

Career

She was part of the Catalan poetic scene at the turn of the 21st century, weaving her work and moving many cultural activities and initiatives from behind the scenes. She also cultivated the genre of artistic action and happenings.[7]

Xargay's poetic work has been described as groundbreaking.[a] Her poetry is characterized by a formal experimentation that often forgoes personal, temporal, or narrative references, and moves away from the traditional sequential structure of poetic discourse.[5] She collaborated on various poetic research projects, some of them with Carles Hac Mor [ca]. She also worked as a screenwriter and translator[9] of works by Blas de Otero, Tzvetan Todorov, Blaise Pascal, and Raymond Queneau.[10]

Xargay contributed to newspapers and magazines such as Avui, Papers d'Art, Reduccions, Transversal, Talp Club, Làtex, Sense títol, Barcelona Review, Internet Corner, and El Temps, with articles on interdisciplinarity, the dissolution of genres, and other topics in the field of art and literature.[7][11]

With David Castillo i Buïls, she was in charge of Barcelona Poetry Week from 2005 to 2010, and with Eduard Escoffet and Martí Sales in 2011. In recent years, she directed La Païssa, a cultural space within El Marquet de les Roques, at Parque natural de San Lorenzo del Munt y del Obac [es], the house where Joan Oliver i Sallarès vacationed, which is owned by the Provincial Deputation of Barcelona.[12]

Death and legacy

She died 19 January 2024, at the age of 63.[10]

In 2025, the Juneda City Council and the Centre of Arts and Memory of Ponent (CAMP) launched the Ester Xargay Videopoetry Award, an award aimed at fostering the field of video art linked to literature, which recognizes the best audiovisual pieces based on poems, exploring the relationship between the word and moving images.[13]

Selected works

Poetry collections

  • Els àngels soterrats, 1990
  • Un pedrís de mil estones, with Carles Hac Mor, 1992. (ISBN 9788486542474)
  • Volts en el temps, La Cèl·lula, 1997 (reprinted in the book Trenca-sons)
  • Epítom infranu o no (Ombres de poemes de Marcel Duchamp), with Carles Hac Mor, 1997. (ISBN 9788479354565)
  • Darrere les tanques, 2000. (ISBN 9788487685897)
  • Trenca-sons, 2002. (ISBN 9788489885417)
  • Salflorvatge, 2006. (ISBN 9788496638006)
  • Zooflèxia (el bestiari més veritable de tots), 2007. (ISBN 9788496638099)
  • Fissura, 2008.
  • Aürt, 2009. (ISBN 9788497797504)
  • Eixida al sostre, 2009. (ISBN 9788492408863)
  • Infinitius, 2017. (ISBN 978-84-16554-59-1)
  • Desintegrar-se, 2019. (ISBN 978-84-948342-6-4)

Novels

  • Carabassa a tot drap, o Amor lliure, ús i abús, with Carles Hac Mor, 2001.

Theatre

  • Tirant lo Blanc la, o La perfecció és feixista, o La construcció del socialisme, with Carles Hac Mor, 2000.

Awards and honours

Notes

References

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