Post by himukhatun09123 on Feb 18, 2024 3:43:20 GMT
The “Casa de Medrano” Cultural Center of Argamasilla de Alba hosted, this Tuesday, the afternoon session of the second day of the summer course of the Autonomous University of Madrid 'I know who I am', directed by Rosa María Navarro Romero and Carlos J. de Carlos Morales, which is being taught between and in Alcázar de San Juan.
At the halfway point of the course, the participants traveled to the site of La Mancha to delve deeper into the life and work of the Valdepeñero Phone Number Database painter Gregorio Prieto, mainly in his work related to Don Quixote. To this end, Javier García-Luengo, member of the Board of Trustees of the Gregorio Prieto Foundation, and full academician, chair of the Hispano-American Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters of Mexico, gave the presentation: “Realities and desires: the Don Quixote of the Generation of.
The mayor, Pedro Ángel Jiménez, in the presentation, thanked the Honorary Bachelors for their presence, José Manuel Lucía, honorary president of the Association of Cervantistas, and Darío Villanueva, director of the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) between , as well as all the attendees, and the director and the director who have counted on Argamasilla de Alba to be part of this course.
Jiménez enlightened the participants in the course about the quixotic tradition of the town and reported on the most important and historical cultural moments experienced in the town, such as the plenary session held by the Royal Spanish Academy on March, the second time in its history that the RAE left its headquarters in Madrid to hold a plenary session.
The Councilor for Culture, José Antonio Navarro, who was in charge of introducing the speaker, highlighted the close relationship between Argamasilla de Alba and Gregorio Prieto, as evidenced by the fact that he chose the Casa de Medrano to sign the birth certificate of the foundation that bears his name and donates works of quixotic theme, which are exhibited in the Gregorio Prieto Gallery of the Casa de Medrano.
In relation to the speaker, Navarro reported that Javier García-Luengo was named Doctor in Art History by the University of Salamanca in 2006 for the thesis: 'Gregorio Prieto. Life and Work obtaining the Extraordinary Doctorate Award.On the other hand, the councilor highlighted that, with participation in this course, Argamasilla de Alba expands the collaborations that it has been promoting and maintaining with different Spanish universities, such as Alcalá de Henares or Castilla-La Mancha.
For Gregorio Prieto, Argamasilla de Alba was an absolutely reference city and the Medrano cave was a true milestone in his career,” García-Luengo stressed. The Medrano Cave will constitute, for Gregorio Prieto, the historical reference par excellence of Cervantes, which is why at the end of August , the painter decided to voluntarily lock himself up for four days in the place where, according to tradition, Cervantes began to write his best-known novel. , according to the painter himself: “To make amends to the writer for what he suffered in such a peculiar prison.In the Medrano Cave, the speaker reported, one of the most emotional episodes in the biography of the Valdepeñero creator took place, crystallizing the idea of bequeathing all his work to his country, “to all Spaniards,” through the foundation he runs. its name and whose founding document was signed in this emblematic place on March .
At the halfway point of the course, the participants traveled to the site of La Mancha to delve deeper into the life and work of the Valdepeñero Phone Number Database painter Gregorio Prieto, mainly in his work related to Don Quixote. To this end, Javier García-Luengo, member of the Board of Trustees of the Gregorio Prieto Foundation, and full academician, chair of the Hispano-American Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters of Mexico, gave the presentation: “Realities and desires: the Don Quixote of the Generation of.
The mayor, Pedro Ángel Jiménez, in the presentation, thanked the Honorary Bachelors for their presence, José Manuel Lucía, honorary president of the Association of Cervantistas, and Darío Villanueva, director of the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE) between , as well as all the attendees, and the director and the director who have counted on Argamasilla de Alba to be part of this course.
Jiménez enlightened the participants in the course about the quixotic tradition of the town and reported on the most important and historical cultural moments experienced in the town, such as the plenary session held by the Royal Spanish Academy on March, the second time in its history that the RAE left its headquarters in Madrid to hold a plenary session.
The Councilor for Culture, José Antonio Navarro, who was in charge of introducing the speaker, highlighted the close relationship between Argamasilla de Alba and Gregorio Prieto, as evidenced by the fact that he chose the Casa de Medrano to sign the birth certificate of the foundation that bears his name and donates works of quixotic theme, which are exhibited in the Gregorio Prieto Gallery of the Casa de Medrano.
In relation to the speaker, Navarro reported that Javier García-Luengo was named Doctor in Art History by the University of Salamanca in 2006 for the thesis: 'Gregorio Prieto. Life and Work obtaining the Extraordinary Doctorate Award.On the other hand, the councilor highlighted that, with participation in this course, Argamasilla de Alba expands the collaborations that it has been promoting and maintaining with different Spanish universities, such as Alcalá de Henares or Castilla-La Mancha.
For Gregorio Prieto, Argamasilla de Alba was an absolutely reference city and the Medrano cave was a true milestone in his career,” García-Luengo stressed. The Medrano Cave will constitute, for Gregorio Prieto, the historical reference par excellence of Cervantes, which is why at the end of August , the painter decided to voluntarily lock himself up for four days in the place where, according to tradition, Cervantes began to write his best-known novel. , according to the painter himself: “To make amends to the writer for what he suffered in such a peculiar prison.In the Medrano Cave, the speaker reported, one of the most emotional episodes in the biography of the Valdepeñero creator took place, crystallizing the idea of bequeathing all his work to his country, “to all Spaniards,” through the foundation he runs. its name and whose founding document was signed in this emblematic place on March .