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December 5, 2001 - February 9, 2002 Curated by Nicolas Helft & Alan Pauls.
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Considered one of the greatest Spanish-language writers of the twentieth century, Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) excelled as a short story writer, but was equally famous for his essays and poetry. In his own way, Borges belonged to three centuries: the nineteenth in which he was born; the twentieth during which he lived and prodigiously wrote; and the twenty-first, an on-line virtual era of computer screens and webs which he did not live to see but anticipated more than once in his fiction. The Colección Jorge Luis Borges of the Fundación San Telmo, Buenos Aires, which hosts the largest existing collection of Borges materials, is proud to present an exhibition of its treasures that will travel the United States during the next two years. Borges: The Time Machine/La Máquina del Tiempo will feature books from Borges' personal library, numerous manuscripts and letters, newspapers and periodicals, photographs from his family album, Borges portraits by famous photographers, and personal belongings which are presented to the public for the first time. The exhibition labels will be in both English and Spanish, as will the text of the 28-page catalog. The illustrated catalog includes original contributions by Juan José Saer, one of the most important contemporary writers from Argentina, and by Prof. Efrain Kristal, of UCLA. The exhibition is curated by Nicolás Helft, Director of the San Telmo Foundation and Argentine writer Alan Pauls. It is divided into five sections, each of which corresponds to a decisive sphere in Borges's life and works: arms and letters; the experience of the avant garde; the controversies and polemics in which he participated; the relationship between his writings and the media; and the metaphor of the universe as a library. These five sections -- five "stops" on a Borgesian tour -- shape the curatorial aspects of the exhibit. They bring to light some of the Argentine writer's most characteristic objects, but also materials representative of a less daunting, more accessible and intimate Borges, a side not always visible in sophisticated academic studies of his writings. Using these "chapters" to structure the exhibition, the curators intend to make it accessible both to the general public, and to scholars and specialists, who will find an analysis of Borges' thoughts on the issues of each chapter and will see rare originals which have never been exhibited before. The exhibition will be open to the
public without charge, Monday - Saturday, 10 am - 5 pm, 5
December 2001 - 9 February 2002, except 24-26 December 2001,
and 1 January 2002, when the Club is closed. For more information visit the website of the Fundación San Telmo. |