Tag Archives: Carla Badillo Coronado

Carla Badillo Coronado: Intuition & Reading

“I wrote El color de la granada when I was 25 years old; I’m now 30….and I won the LOEWE Young Poets Prize,” explains Carla Badillo Coronado. The 2015 winning book was written during the time it took for the fruit to “decompose before her eyes.” Quite a challenge for such a young person.

“A prize doesn’t make you better or worse, nor is it an objective in and of itself –at least not in my case– but rather a consequence,” asserts the poet. She believes that out of all her books, both published and unpublished, this one is “quite unique because of how it was conceived, as if it were the work of a goldsmith. Sometimes language doesn’t quite rise up to the challenge of giving form to that particular poetry or hidden revelation and there is an ongoing struggle between what you want to communicate and the language you use, because it’s not up to par.”

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Carla was attracted to the publishing possibilities that the LOEWE award offered. She points to the “seriousness” of the rules of entry and admits that she submitted her book without realising the prestige and recognition that winning the award would afford her. “I didn’t know any of the jury members and it’s the first time the Prize goes to Ecuador.” She does remember feeling that “the book was ready” and that something within pushed her to send it off, despite her lack of resources at the time: “I had to borrow money to print the manuscripts and mail them to Spain!” Today, Carla Badillo Coronado is the first Ecuadorian woman whose work has been published by Editorial Visor and she is incredibly pleased that her book “stood out among 800 manuscripts from 29 different countries.” That is precisely why she dedicates her win “to Ecuadorian immigrants living Spain, who live in difficult circumstances while fighting to have a respectable life, because that’s exactly what I’m trying to do myself. I strive to be coherent with what I believe and to let my intuition be my beacon.”

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With regards to her day-to-day she declares that “writing is what allows me to find harmony in chaos.” Following a difficult year during which she suffered an emotional breakdown, and just 24 hours prior to winning the Loewe Prize, this writer and reporter published her first novel –Abierta sigue la noche– with an incredibly high print run, as part of Ecuador’s Reading Incentive Plan, and is happy to navigate the waters of both genres: “I like to express myself using different languages; I have always been drawn to that hybrid and that’s evident in El color de la granada.

Carla is a woman who tries to distance herself from the world; she doesn’t have a cell phone so that she “can find the silence that a writer or poet needs.” She knew exactly how she wanted to spend the award money: travelling and writing, and that is what she’s done for almost a year. “My goal is to reach the Caucasus and Armenia, the birthplace of both Sayat Nova and Sergei Paradjanov –so tied to El color de la granada– which is particularly key this year since 2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.” Sure of her intuition, Carla states: “My education lies in the books and materials I’ve read….and in the people I’ve met throughout my life. I have no fears.”

Photo Captions: Carla Badillo Coronado with Enrique & Sheila Loewe during the 28th LOEWE FOUNDATION International Poetry Prize ceremony, March 2016 © Uxío de Vila, 2016.

Three emotion-filled moments in the award ceremony of the 28th LOEWE Poetry Prize

The protagonist of the first memorable moment of the LOEWE Foundation International Poetry Prize award ceremony in its 28th edition, held this past Thursday in Madrid’s Hotel Palace, was Enrique Loewe Knappe, the firm’s patriarch, who died last week. It was his son Enrique, the person behind the creation of the award, who remembered him.
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Poet Chantal Maillard was responsible for the second one. Maillard, who generally shies away from public literary ceremonies and celebrations, agreed to present the work by Carla Badillo Coronado (Quito, 1985), winner of the Young Poets Prize, after finding that the words in El color de la granada were “devoid of gimmicks”. She believes that the Ecuadorian writer is “someone who knows that poems are not made, but rather found. Someone who remembers that a poem is a vehicle for humility”. She warned against prizes, which she feels can be double edged swords: distracting and illuminating in equal measure. She encouraged Carla to keep her focus, avoid distractions and “lie low when the bright lights come calling”. When Carla spoke, she talked about poetry as a personal trench from where she may “face life, face death and face herself”.

The third emotional moment (and humorous as well) took place when Cuban writer Abilio Estévez took the podium to introduce his friend Víctor Rodríguez Núñez (Havana, 1955), winner of this year’s LOEWE Prize. They both worked for cultural magazine El caimán barbudo during the 1980’s, the winner as the director and he, as a distracted copy editor. Estévez gave an overview of his friend’s book remembering that “up in the clouds no one is a foreigner” and that even after exile’s longest night “morning inevitably dawns”. When Rodríguez Núñez spoke, he quoted José Martí to highlight that “poetry is more important than agriculture” and closed by reading the last poem in despegue, the winning book: “mas este espacio tiene su compás / ni la muerte se apura llega tarde / por un sitio decente / a sacudir el ser con un trapito”.

Photo captions: Enrique Loewe, Carla Badillo Coronado, Víctor Rodríguez Núñez and Sheila Loewe © Uxío da Vila.

The 2015 LOEWE Poetry Prize, again in America

Cuban poet Víctor Rodriguez Núñez (Havana, 1955) has won the 28th LOEWE Foundation International Poetry Prize for his book despegue (take-off). The jury, integrated by Francisco Brines, José Manuel Caballero Bonald, Antonio Colinas, Óscar Hahn, Cristina Peri Rossi, Soledad Puértolas, Jaime Siles, Luis Antonio de Villena, and chaired by Victor Garcia de la Concha, has chosen a book which they found courageous, authentic, and able to link irrationalism with social immediacy. The LOEWE Young Poets Prize has been given to Carla Badillo Coronado from Ecuador (Quito, 1985) for her book El color de la granada (the colour of the pomegranate).

JoséManuelCaballero Bonald,JaimeSiles,SoledadPuértolas,VíctorGarcíadelaConcha,LuisAntoniodeVillena,EnriqueLoewe,JesúsGarcíaSánchez,SheilaLoewe,ÓscarHahn,FranciscoBrines,AntonioColinas-foto Álvaro ToméOn November 11, at the LOEWE Store in Gran Vía in Madrid, and after a few loving words remembering the recently deceased Carlos Bousoño, the names of the winners were made public in a ceremony attended by the members of the Jury and by Enrique and Sheila Loewe, Honorary President and Director of the LOEWE Foundation, respectively.

This year, 30 books have been finalists among the 801 entries submitted from 29 different countries, 27% of them from Latin America. The LOEWE Poetry Prize awards an unpublished work of 300 verses and a Young Poets Prize is given to a poet under 30.

Víctor Rodríguez Núñez

Luis Antonio de Villena began his presentation of the awarded book, despegue, highlighting the importance of Cuba “as one of the most important creation places for the Spanish language”. He explained how the origin of Víctor Rodríguez Núñez -born in Havana and currently living in the United States- has influenced his “criticism towards Cuban reality from an outside point of view” and the “communicative and baroque protest in this book in face of a world that must ‘take-off’. His deep knowledge on poetic tradition allows him to renovate and “to play with the shadow of a sonnet”, in words of Luis Antonio de Villena.

Carla Badillo Coronado-foto Mark Alvarez

Poet Antonio Colinas emphasised the “maturity” of Carla Badillo Coronado and her poetry. To him, her verses mean a public defense addressing symbology in a quite complex perspective for her age. The struggle of the pairing life-death and a “subtle skepticism that shakes the reader both forcefully and directly”, creates “a book that makes us feel and think about the limits of life, always with an extraordinary expressive sobriety”.

Next March the members of the Jury will meet the poets at the Prize Ceremony and the presentation of their books, which will be published by Visor publishing house.

Photographs: José Manuel Caballero Bonald, Jaime Siles, Víctor García de la Concha, Soledad Puértolas, Luis Antonio de Villena, Enrique Loewe, Chus Visor, Sheila Loewe, Óscar Hahn, Francisco Brines and Antonio Colinas © Álvaro Tomé for LOEWE Foundation, 2015. Víctor Rodríguez Núñez © Katherine M Hedeen and Carla Badillo Coronado © Mark Álvarez.