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{{Short description|Spanish poet (b. 1924)}}
{{unreferenced|date=December 2024}}
{{Infobox writer
'''Isabel Oliva Prat''' (], 1924) is a Spanish poet in the ] language.
| image = File:Isabel Oliva Prat.png
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1924|11|27}}
| birth_place = ], Catalonia, Spain
| language = ]
}}
'''Isabel Oliva Prat''' (born 27 November 1924, ]) is a Spanish poet in the ] language.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=English Isabel Oliva i Prat |url=https://www.escriptors.cat/autors/olivai/english |access-date=2024-12-25 |website=] |language=ca}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Garcia I Pujades |first=Xavier |date=2014-11-24 |title=Poètica Isabel Oliva |url=https://www.elpuntavui.cat/opinio/article/8-articles/797676-poetica-isabel-oliva.html |access-date=2024-12-25 |website=El Punt Avui |language=ca}}</ref>


== Biography == == Biography ==
Prat was born in Girona, and attended school there. Her father died shortly before the ].<ref name=":0" />
She studied Teaching and Music, and she worked as a teacher in several educational centers. Her father and uncle were music teachers and encouraged her from a young age to cultivate the art of music. She was always a great fan of ] but it was not until after her professional retirement that she began to write and publish, and from that moment on, her work was well received by critics and deserving of numerous awards.


Prat became a teacher after graduating from Escola Normal de Mestres. Her first position was in ], where she met Francisco Torrado, whom she married in 1950. The couple had three children. After Torrado died, Prat returned to education, working as a Catalan language teacher in Font de la Pólvora.<ref name=":0" />
== Works ==
A good connoisseur of the Catalan language and its ], she cultivates a poetry deeply rooted in personal and collective life experience, where the concern for memory, landscape, solitude and art predominates as a fundamental feature of human expression. Likewise, critics have highlighted her poetry's capacity for subtlety, which allows her to always suggest rather than describe.


She studied Teaching and Music, and she worked as a teacher in several educational centers. Her father and uncle were music teachers and encouraged her from a young age to cultivate the art of music.
== Bibliography ==
   ·   ''Terra de fang'' (2000)


Prat was always a great fan of ], but did not begin to write and publish poetry of her own until after her retirement.<ref name=":0" />
·      ''Jardí retrobat'' (2002)


== Bibliography ==
·      ''Fil de vidre'' (2003)


* ''Laberint de Dèdal''
·      ''Rellotge de sorra - Haikús (2004)''
* ''Jardí retrobat'' (2002)
* ''Fil de vidre'' (2003)
* ''Rellotge de sorra - Haikús'' (2004)
* ''Quadern de botànica'' (2004)
* ''L'instant de l'àngel'' (2004)
* ''Contrallum amb orquídia'' (2005)
* ''Col·leccionista de tardes'' (2007)
* ''L'estoig del violí'' (2008)
* ''Ària per a una sola corda'' (2011)
* ''L'obrador del vitraller'' (2011)
* ''La capsa carmesí'' (2012)
* ''Les guardes del ventall'' (2012)
* ''L'últim revolt de la paraula'' (2013)
* ''Crepuscles sobre el Moldava'' (2015)
* ''Passeig d'hivern (2016)''
* ''Temps d'Aram (2018)''
* {{Cite book|chapter=Llum a les golfes|pages=85-86|title=Haikús de Sam Abrams|year=2019}}
* ''La persistència de la memòria (2020)''


== Awards ==
·      ''Quadern de botànica'' (2004)
Source''<ref name=":0" />''


* 2000 Terra de Fang de ], for ''Laberint de Dèdal''
·      ''L'instant de l'àngel'' (2004)
* Guillem Viladot (2001)

* Narcís Saguer (2001, 2005)
·      ''Contrallum amb orquídia'' (2005)
* Goleta i Bergantí (2007)

* Francesc Castells (2012, 2016)
·      ''Col·leccionista de tardes'' (2007)

·      ''L'estoig del violí'' (2008)

·      ''Ària per a una sola corda'' (2011)

·      ''L'obrador del vitraller (2011)''

·      ''La capsa carmesí (2012)''

·      ''Les guardes del ventall (2012)''

·      ''L'últim revolt de la paraula (2013)''

·      ''Crepuscles sobre el Moldava (2015)''
]
·      ''Passeig d'hivern (2016)''

·      ''Temps d'Aram (2018)''

·      ''Llum a les golfes - colaboración en antología haikús de Sam Abrams. (2019)''

·      ''La persistència de la memòria (2020)''


== References ==
<references />
== External links == == External links ==
*
*





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{{DEFAULTSORT:Oliva, Isabel}}
{{uncategorised|date=December 2024}}
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Latest revision as of 19:04, 26 December 2024

Spanish poet (b. 1924)
Isabel Oliva
Born (1924-11-27) November 27, 1924 (age 100)
Girona, Catalonia, Spain
LanguageCatalan

Isabel Oliva Prat (born 27 November 1924, Girona) is a Spanish poet in the Catalan language.

Biography

Prat was born in Girona, and attended school there. Her father died shortly before the Spanish Civil War.

Prat became a teacher after graduating from Escola Normal de Mestres. Her first position was in Espolla, where she met Francisco Torrado, whom she married in 1950. The couple had three children. After Torrado died, Prat returned to education, working as a Catalan language teacher in Font de la Pólvora.

She studied Teaching and Music, and she worked as a teacher in several educational centers. Her father and uncle were music teachers and encouraged her from a young age to cultivate the art of music.

Prat was always a great fan of poetry, but did not begin to write and publish poetry of her own until after her retirement.

Bibliography

  • Laberint de Dèdal
  • Jardí retrobat (2002)
  • Fil de vidre (2003)
  • Rellotge de sorra - Haikús (2004)
  • Quadern de botànica (2004)
  • L'instant de l'àngel (2004)
  • Contrallum amb orquídia (2005)
  • Col·leccionista de tardes (2007)
  • L'estoig del violí (2008)
  • Ària per a una sola corda (2011)
  • L'obrador del vitraller (2011)
  • La capsa carmesí (2012)
  • Les guardes del ventall (2012)
  • L'últim revolt de la paraula (2013)
  • Crepuscles sobre el Moldava (2015)
  • Passeig d'hivern (2016)
  •  Temps d'Aram (2018)
  •  "Llum a les golfes". Haikús de Sam Abrams. 2019. pp. 85–86.
  • La persistència de la memòria (2020)

Awards

Source

  • 2000 Terra de Fang de Deltebre, for Laberint de Dèdal
  • Guillem Viladot (2001)
  • Narcís Saguer (2001, 2005)
  • Goleta i Bergantí (2007)
  • Francesc Castells (2012, 2016)

References

  1. ^ "English Isabel Oliva i Prat". Associació d'Escriptors en Llengua Catalana (in Catalan). Retrieved 2024-12-25.
  2. Garcia I Pujades, Xavier (2014-11-24). "Poètica Isabel Oliva". El Punt Avui (in Catalan). Retrieved 2024-12-25.

External links

Categories: