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Remedios Varo

Remedios Varo
Black and white photo of a middle-aged Remedios Varo sitting at her easel, holding a paintbrush.
Varo at her easel, 1959
Born
María de los Remedios Alicia Rodriga Varo y Uranga

(1908-12-16)16 December 1908
Died8 October 1963(1963-10-08) (aged 54)
Mexico City, Mexico
Alma materReal Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando
MovementSurrealism

María de los Remedios Alicia Rodriga Varo y Uranga (known as Remedios Varo, 16 December 1908 – 8 October 1963) was a Spanish and Mexican[1] surrealist painter.[2]

Early life and education

María de los Remedios Alicia Rodriga Varo y Uranga was born on 16 December 1908 in Anglès, a small town in the province of Girona, in Catalonia. Remedios was named in honor of the Virgen de los Remedios ("Virgin of Remedies") as a 'remedy' for an older sister's death. She had two surviving siblings: an older brother Rodrigo, and a younger brother Luis. Her mother, Ignacia Uranga y Bergareche, was born in Argentina to Basque parents and her father, Rodrigo Varo y Zajalvo, was from Córdoba in Andalusia.[3]

When Varo was a young child, her family moved frequently throughout Spain and North Africa to follow her father's work as a hydraulic engineer.[4] While her father was a somewhat agnostic liberal who studied Esperanto,[a] her mother was a devout Catholic and enrolled her in a strict convent school at the age of eight. Varo's father encouraged her artistic endeavors, taking her to museums and having her meticulously copy his diagrams. While in school, Varo was somewhat rebellious. She read authors such as Alexandre Dumas, Jules Verne, and Edgar Allan Poe, as well as mystical literature and Eastern spiritual works.[6] As a teenager she became interested in dreams, writing stories which developed fantastical themes she would later explore in her art.[7]

In 1924, Varo enrolled at the prestigious Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid, a school known for rigid and exacting training. Aside from the required classes,[b] she took an elective class in scientific drawing. One of her instructors was Realist painter Manuel Benedito, from whom she learned traditional oil painting techniques.[9] Much of the work she created from 1926–1935, particularly her academic paintings, has been lost; it is unknown what happened to those artworks.[10]

In the 1920s, the Surrealist movement was becoming popular with the Madrid art scene; the city hosted avant-garde intellectuals and artists such as Federico García Lorca, Luis Buñuel, Rafael Alberti, and Salvador Dalí. Varo became attracted to the surreal, finding inspiration in the works of Hieronymus Bosch, Francisco Goya, and El Greco which she visited at the Museo del Prado.[11][12]

Career

Varo graduated from the Academia in 1930.[13] Soon after, she married former classmate Gerardo Lizárraga [es] in San Sebastián. Lizárraga was a fellow Surrealist who worked in both visual arts and filmmaking; he was also an anarchist.[14] Following an outbreak of violence in Madrid resulting from the establishment of the Second Spanish Republic, Varo and Lizárraga moved to Paris.[15] In Paris, Varo enrolled at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and quickly dropped out, realizing she did not want to remain within the confines of formal education. Working odd jobs and engaging with the Parisian art scene, the couple stayed in the city for a year before moving to Barcelona in 1932.[16][13]

Accidentalitat de la dona - Violència, c. 1932–1936

By the early 1930s, Barcelona had become the liberal and avant-garde artistic center of Spain, more so than Madrid. Soon after arriving, Varo started a romantic relationship with fellow artist Esteban Francés, although still living with Lizárraga; this was the first of multiple open relationships she would have.[17] While in Barcelona, Varo and Lizárraga worked for an advertising firm. Varo became part of a circle of other avant-garde artists, including José Luis Florit [Wikidata] and Óscar Domínguez,[13] and with Francés she came into contact with French Surrealists.[17] While sharing an art studio on the Plaça de Lesseps with Francés, Varo began creating her first artworks after graduating from the Academia. Her work of the mid-1930s indicates familiarity with contemporary Spanish and French Surrealist imagery.[18] Varo often played the popular Surrealist game cadavre exquis with her friends, and sent works she had made via the game to fellow artist and friend Marcel Jean for circulation in Paris.[19]

By the summer of 1935, the tension and violence which had caused Varo and Lizárraga to leave Madrid had spread throughout Spain; the Spanish Civil War began the next year. Varo's brother Luis enlisted in the Francoist army and died of typhoid fever soon thereafter, a course of events which would come as a shock to Varo.[20] It was in this context that Domínguez introduced Varo to French Surrealist poet Benjamin Péret, who had arrived in Barcelona in August 1936 to volunteer with the Republican faction. Péret was highly politically active; he was a member of the Trotskyist POUM and staunchly anti-clerical.[21] Varo and Péret soon became romantically involved; his 1936 volume of love poetry, Je sublime, was dedicated to her.[22]

France

When Péret decided to return to Paris in 1937, Varo joined him.[22] Francés soon followed, and would compete with Péret for Varo's affection. Through Péret, Varo became acquainted with the inner circle of Surrealists, including André Breton, Max Ernst, Victor Brauner, Joan Miró, Wolfgang Paalen, and Leonora Carrington.[23][24] Varo felt intimidated by Breton—and Péret—at Surrealist gatherings, as the two fostered an atmosphere which André Thirion compared to an "entrance exam".[25] By the late 1930s, Varo had started giving her year of birth as 1913 instead of 1908; this would later be reflected on her passport and grave. According to biographer Janet Kaplan, she may have fabricated being five years younger to fit more closely to the Surrealist ideal of the femme-enfant: an uncorrupted, childlike woman intuitively connected with the unconscious mind. During the period of 1937–1939, Varo experimented with new techniques and influences, finding inspiration in the works of her friends Dalí, Ernst, Paalen, Brauner, and René Magritte.[26] Never formally a part of the Surrealist group, Varo nonetheless participated in the 1936 London International Surrealist Exhibition and subsequent International Surrealist Exhibitions in Tokyo, Paris, Mexico City, and New York. Her work was also often republished in Surrealist periodicals, including Minotaure.[27]

While in Paris with Péret, Varo lived the impoverished and bohemian life typical of artists. They both worked numerous odd jobs; Varo, along with Domínguez, resorted to forging de Chirico paintings when particularly destitute.[28] As she was living with Péret, she became romantically involved with Brauner[c] and her work of the period was heavily influenced by his.[30]

World War II

In 1939, the Nationalists claimed victory in Spain and Francisco Franco disallowed anyone associated with the Republicans from entering the country; Varo became permanently unable to return to her home and was isolated from her family. This deeply impacted her, and was a source of pain and regret throughout her life.[22] In July of the same year, the French government began evacuating Paris, and in September World War II officially began. Varo and her circle stayed in the city, which for the first eight months of war saw little action other than an influx of foreign refugees from elsewhere in Europe. As a foreign national herself, Varo now risked deportation in an increasingly hostile environment. Her association with the communist Péret put her at further risk, and he was imprisoned in early 1940 for his political activism.[31] Varo was imprisoned as well, at some point in 1940, for her relationship with Péret. She never spoke about this experience; the length and location of her internment and the conditions she faced are unknown. However, according to friends' accounts, it had an intense impact on her.[32]

While viewing a documentary film on French internment camps by Hungarian photojournalist Emerico Weisz, by coincidence Varo recognized Gerardo Lizárraga, to whom she was still legally married. They had lost contact when Varo left Spain, while Lizárraga remained to fight for the Republicans; when the Nationalists won, he fled to France and was imprisoned. After seeing the film, Varo and her network successfully bribed authorities and secured the release of Lizárraga.[33]

On 14 June 1940, the Nazis invaded Paris, putting Varo at imminent risk. She, along with millions of other Parisians, fled to the unoccupied south of France. Domínguez insisted she take his seat in a car going south, and eventually she arrived in the coastal village of Canet-Plage. Initially staying with Jacques Hérold and several other refugees, she soon moved in with Brauner.[34] By August 1940, she had left Canet-Plage for Marseille and reunited with now-free Péret. Marseille was, although unoccupied, not safe; the Gestapo maintained a presence in the city. Varo and Péret found shelter with Varian Fry's Emergency Rescue Committee, an organization dedicated to facilitating the migration of artists and intellectuals from wartime Europe to the Americas.[35][36] Over time, much of Varo's circle made it to Marseille, where they shared their limited funds among each other and met nightly in cafés.[37]

The situation in Marseille deteriorated in 1940 and 1941, and the Rescue Committee recognized Péret and Varo's immediate need to escape the Vichy authorities. With Péret having been denied entry into the United States due to his communist politics, they looked toward Mexico, which had declared amnesty for Spanish refugees in 1940. The Rescue Committee made appeals for funding of their travel to Mexico, and found places on the liner Serpa Pinto, due to depart from Casablanca, for them. Through unknown means,[d] Varo and Péret arrived in Casablanca and boarded the ship, which was crowded with other refugees.[39]

Mexico

Roulotte, 1956
La huida, detail, 1961

Varo arrived in Mexico City in late 1941, part of a large migration of Spanish intellectuals and artists. The Mexican government under Lázaro Cárdenas gave Spanish refugees asylum and automatic citizenship, with few restrictions on employment; the European émigrés therefore contributed significantly to Mexico's economy and culture. Varo and Péret, rather than becoming ingratiated with the Mexican artistic community, preferred to associate with other Europeans, including old friends Lizárraga and Francés. Also within their circle was Gunther Gerzso, Kati Horna, Emerico Weisz, Dorothy Hood, Luis Buñuel, César Moro, Wolfgang Paalen, and Alice Rahon. Leonora Carrington, whom Varo had previously met in Paris, would become Varo's closest friend.[40]

Varo and Péret rented a tenement apartment together in the Colonia San Rafael neighborhood, which Varo decorated with artwork and objects she thought of as magical. She also took care of several birds and stray cats.[41][42] They were impoverished, and Varo supported herself and Péret by working odd jobs, including for Marc Chagall.[43] She made her most consistent living from producing illustrations for Bayer advertisements.[44] During the early 1940s, Varo focused on writing as a creative outlet, producing few paintings.[45]

In 1947 Péret wanted to return to France, while Varo wished to stay in Mexico, which by then she viewed as her home. Péret moved back to Paris, and Varo started a relationship with a French pilot and fellow refugee named Jean Nicolle. They initially moved in together with Horna in the Colonia Roma neighborhood; they later moved into Lizárraga's previous apartment.[46]

Soon after, she joined a French scientific expedition in Venezuela with Nicolle. There she visited her mother and brother Rodrigo, an epidemiologist. Varo, staying in Caracas and Maracay, studied mosquitoes with a microscope and produced drawings of them for a Public Ministry of Health campaign against malaria. She returned to Mexico City in 1949, after struggling to obtain funds for travel back.[47][48]

In 1952 Varo married Austrian refugee Walter Gruen, and ended her career in commercial graphic design in favor of her personal art.[48] Varo found critical and financial success with two exhibitions at the Galería Diana, including her first solo exhibition, in 1955–1956.[49] The success of the 1955 solo exhibition allowed Varo to establish a waiting list for buyers.[50] Her second and final solo exhibition took place at the Galería Juan Martín in 1962; all of the paintings displayed were sold.[51]

Varo painted her final finished canvas, titled Still Life Reviving, in 1963. She died of a heart attack on 8 October of the same year.[51]

Relationship with Leonora Carrington and Kati Horna

Initially having met in Paris in the 1930s when the latter was living with Max Ernst, Varo and Carrington reunited in Mexico City. Carrington was an English artist who bonded with Varo over their shared experiences.[45][e] Carrington and Varo shared an interest in the occult and magic, and they found inspiration in the folk practices of Mexico.[52]

Among all the refugees that were forced to flee from Europe to Mexico City during and after World War II, Remedios Varo, Leonora Carrington, and Kati Horna formed a bond that would immensely affect their lives and work. They lived close to each other in the Colonia Roma district of Mexico City.

Varo and Carrington had previously met through André Breton while living in Paris. Although Horna did not meet the other two until they were all in Mexico City, she was already familiar with the work of Varo and Carrington after being given a few of their paintings by Edward James, a British poet and patron of the surrealist movement.

All three attended the meetings of followers of the Russian mystics Peter Ouspensky and George Gurdjieff.[53] They were inspired by Gurdjieff's study of the evolution of consciousness and Ouspensky's idea of the possibility of four-dimensional painting. Though deeply influenced by the ideas of the Russian mystics, the women often ridiculed the practices and behavior of those in the circle.[citation needed] The trio were sometimes referred to as "the three witches", because of their interest in the occult and spiritual practices.[54]

After becoming friends, Varo and Carrington began writing collaboratively and wrote two plays together which were not published: El santo cuerpo grasoso and (unfinished) Lady Milagra. Using a technique similar to cadavre exquis, they took turns writing small segments of text and put them together. Even when not writing together, they were often drawing from the same sources of inspiration and using the same themes in their paintings.[55] Varo and Carrington remained close friends until Varo's death in 1963.[56]

Artistic influences

The characters pictured in Varo's artwork resemble herself, with heart-shaped faces, long noses, and almond-shaped eyes.[57] According to art historian Janet Kaplan, much of her work is autobiographical in nature; her 1960–1961 triptych reflects her time as a student in a restrictive convent school.[7] Her paintings, often depicting journeys and encounters with strange people, also reflect the frequent travel of her childhood[58] and her traumatic experience of exile and war.[57]

With the discovery of the pre-Columbian village Tlatilco in the early 1940s, Varo began collecting pre-Columbian artifacts from the site and elsewhere; she developed a large collection over time.[59] However, indigenous Mexican influence on her art was limited, and she continued to mostly draw from European sources throughout her mature period.[60]

Philosophical influences

Varo considered surrealism as an "expressive resting place within the limits of Cubism, and as a way of communicating the incommunicable".[61]

Even though Varo was critical of her childhood religion, Catholicism, her work was influenced by religion. She differed from other Surrealists because of her constant use of religion in her work.[62] She also turned to a wide range of mystic and hermetic traditions, both Western and non-Western, for influence. She was influenced by her belief in magic and animistic faiths. She was very connected to nature and believed that there was strong relation between the plant, human, animal, and mechanical world. Her belief in mystical forces greatly influenced her paintings.[2] Varo was aware of the importance of biology, chemistry, physics, and botany, and thought it should blend together with other aspects of life.[2] Her fascination with science, including Einstein's theory of relativity and Darwinian evolution, has been noted by admirers of her art.[63]

She turned with equal interest to the ideas of Carl Jung as to the theories of George Gurdjieff, P. D. Ouspensky, Helena Blavatsky, Meister Eckhart, and the Sufis, and was as fascinated with the legend of the Holy Grail as with sacred geometry, witchcraft,[64] alchemy, and the I Ching. Varo described her beliefs about her own powers of witchcraft in a letter to English author Gerald Gardner, "Personally, I don't believe I'm endowed with any special powers, but instead with an ability to see relationships of cause and effect quickly, and this beyond the ordinary limits of common logic."[65] In 1938 and 1939, Varo joined her closest companions Frances, Roberto Matta, and Gordon Onslow Ford in exploring the fourth dimension, basing much of their studies on Ouspensky's book Tertium Organum. The books Illustrated Anthology of Sorcery, Magic and Alchemy by Grillot de Givry and The History of Magic and the Occult by Kurt Seligmann were highly valued in Breton's Surrealist circle. She saw in each of these an avenue to self-knowledge and the transformation of consciousness.

Surrealist influences

One critic states, "Remedios seems to never limit herself to one mode of expression. For her tools of the painter and the writer are unified in breaking down our visual and intellectual customs".[66] Even so, most classify her as a surrealist artist in that her work displays many trappings of the surrealist practice. Her work displays a liberating self-image and evokes a sense of otherworldliness which is so characteristic of the surrealist movement. One scholar notes that Varo's practice of automatic writing directly correlates to that of the Surrealists. The father of Surrealism, André Breton, excluded women as fundamental to the movement of Surrealism, but after Varo's death in 1963, he connected her "forever to the ranks of international surrealism".[67]

The Surrealist movement tended to devalue women. Some of Varo's art elevated women, while still falling under the category of Surrealism, but it was not necessarily her intention for her work to address problems in gender inequality. Her art and actions challenged the traditional patriarchy; Wolfgang Paalen encouraged her in this with his theories about the origins of civilization in matriarchal cultures, and the analogies between pre-classic Europe and pre-Mayan Mexico.[62][68]

Analysis of Varo's artwork

Mexican philosopher Juliana González, a friend of Varo's,[69] writes that an element of "Romantic optimism" in her art distinguishes Varo from the broader Surrealist movement.[70] According to the art historian Deborah Haynes, Varo subverted the typically patriarchal attitudes of the Surrealists with her ambiguously gendered paintings.[71]

Varo often painted images of women in confined spaces, achieving a sense of isolation. While Varo did not deem her own work feminist, "her work stretches the limits of and directly challenges confabulated, patriarchal ideals of femininity".[66] Also, Varo's work redacts male interpretation of the female body. Her works focus on female empowerment and agency. The androgynous figures characteristic of her later work also challenge gender in that the figures do not fall neatly into gender normative categories, and often could be of either sex, creating a sense of the "middle area" between the two sexes and of the gender norms placed on them. One critic states, "Because the female body, a sacred erotic artistic space for men, is transformed by [Varo] into nongendered shapes and forms, namely animals and insects, the space becomes freed from monolithic sexual interpretation".[66]  

Later in her career, her characters developed into her emblematic androgynous figures with heart-shaped faces, large almond eyes, and the aquiline noses that represent her own features. Varo often depicted herself through these key features in her paintings, regardless of the figure's gender.[2] "Varo tends to not play out personal strife on the canvas but rather portrays herself in various roles in surreal dreamscapes".[66] "It is Varo herself who is the alchemist or explorer. In creating these characters, she is defining her identity".[72]

Many of Varo's works depict animals, primarily cats and birds. Varo also frequently depicted hybrid creatures which combined cats, owls, or women. Cats play varied roles in Varo's art; sometimes they are observers, conveyors of symbolism, or "familiars".[73] A small minority of her paintings feature cats as the central subject;[f] generally, cats occupy a collaborative role in the scene.[g][74] In Varo's work, birds usually represent imagination and spiritual enlightenment; in some paintings such as Creation of the Birds (1958) and The Encounter (1962), owl-human hybrids represent wisdom.[76]

Varo's work also focuses on psychoanalysis and its role in society and female agency. In speaking on Woman leaving the Psychoanalyst (1961), one of Varo's biographers states, "Not only does Varo debunk the idea of a correct process of mental healing, but also she trivializes the very nature of that process by representing the impossible: a physical and literal dismissal of the father, Order, and in Lacanian terms the official entrance into culture: verbal Language".[66]

Legacy

In 1964, the National Museum of Modern Art in the Palacio de Bellas Artes held a tribute exhibition of Varo's work, with record attendance.[51] The Museo de Arte Moderno in Mexico City held a retrospective exhibition in 1971, which attracted the then-highest attendance in the museum's history,[50] and again in 1983 and 1994.[77] More than fifty of her works were displayed in a retrospective exhibition in 2000 at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC.[78] In 2023, the Art Institute of Chicago held an exhibit of her work the first to be held of her work in the last 20 years in the U.S. with half of the works seen for the first time in the U.S.[79]

Varo's artwork is well known in Mexico, but is not as well known throughout the rest of the world.[80]

Selected list of works

Notes

  1. ^ Esperanto, a constructed international auxiliary language, was associated with anticlericalism in Spain at the time.[5]
  2. ^ The Academia's curriculum included strict and traditional study in anatomy, composition, perspective, color theory, architecture, figure drawing, still life, landscape painting, and decorative painting.[8]
  3. ^ Their relationship would result in a dispute between Francés, Domínguez, and Brauner in August 1938. After Francés criticized Varo's multiple romantic relationships during a gathering in Domínguez's studio, Domínguez threw a glass at him and accidentally hit Brauner, blinding him in one eye.[29]
  4. ^ According to Varo they paid an intermediary to secure passage on a black market fishing boat. The intermediary then left them stranded on the docks and stole their money. However, the operator of the fishing boat was later revealed as a serial killer of the refugees who had boarded his boat; Varo and Péret had unknowingly escaped. The reality of how they got to Casablanca is undocumented. Varo's biographer Janet Kaplan speculates they may have disguised themselves as French soldiers or merchants.[38]
  5. ^ When the two met in Mexico, Carrington had recently been released from hospitalization in a mental institution in Spain, and Varo had been released from French imprisonment.[45]
  6. ^ Examples include the human-feline hybrids in Cat Man (1943), Feline Personage (1945), and Feline Lady (1953), and Cats' Paradise (1955) and The Cat Fern (1957).[74]
  7. ^ Examples include Sympathy (1955), Revelation or The Clockmaker (1955), Cosmic Energy (1956), Mimesis (1960), and Vegetal Architecture (1962).[75]

References

  1. ^ Tibol, Raquel (2014). Buñuel y Remedios Varo: Dos momentos del surrealismo en México (in Spanish). Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial México. ISBN 9786073125017.
  2. ^ a b c d Kaplan 1980
  3. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 11–12
  4. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 11
  5. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 14
  6. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 14–16
  7. ^ a b Kaplan 2000, p. 18
  8. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 29
  9. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 27–29
  10. ^ Lozano 2000, p. 25
  11. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 29–30
  12. ^ Berland 2016, p. 132
  13. ^ a b c Gruen 1998, p. 43
  14. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 30–31
  15. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 33
  16. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 35
  17. ^ a b Kaplan 2000, pp. 35–36
  18. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 37–38
  19. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 41–42
  20. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 45–47
  21. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 48–52
  22. ^ a b c Kaplan 2000, p. 53
  23. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 55
  24. ^ Gruen 1998, pp. 43–44
  25. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 55–56
  26. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 56–57
  27. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 62–63
  28. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 63–64
  29. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 67
  30. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 64–67
  31. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 67–69
  32. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 71
  33. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 70
  34. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 72
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  40. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 85–88
  41. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 90–92
  42. ^ Vosburg 2005, p. 83: "Varo was renowned for taking in stray cats from the streets, and few who visited her refrained from commenting on it."
  43. ^ Kaplan 2000, pp. 97–98
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  45. ^ a b c Kaplan 2000, p. 93
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  55. ^ van Raaij, Moorhead & Arcq 2010, pp. 17–20
  56. ^ van Raaij, Moorhead & Arcq 2010
  57. ^ a b Kaplan 1987, p. 39
  58. ^ Kaplan 1980, p. 14
  59. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 104
  60. ^ Kaplan 2000, p. 220
  61. ^ Lupina Lara Elizondo (2001). Visión de México y sus Artistas Siglo XX 1901–1950. Mexico City: Qualitas. pp. 216–219. ISBN 978-9685005586.
  62. ^ a b Haynes 1995
  63. ^ Angier, Natalie (11 April 2000). "Scientific Epiphanies Celebrated on Canvas". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
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  74. ^ a b Vosburg 2005, pp. 84–85
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  76. ^ Vosburg 2005, pp. 89–91
  77. ^ Lozano 2000, p. 17
  78. ^ Congdon, Kristen; Hallmark, Kara Kelley (2002). Artists from Latin American Cultures: A Biographical Dictionary. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 292. ISBN 9780313315442. Retrieved 28 March 2015.
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  113. ^ "La huida". Mexicana: Repositorio del Patrimonio Cultural de México (in Spanish). Secretaría de Cultura.
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  115. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, pp. 304–305, no. 329
  116. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, pp. 305–306, no. 334
  117. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, p. 306, no. 337
  118. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, p. 308, no. 345
  119. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, p. 309, no. 350
  120. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, p. 310, no. 356
  121. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, pp. 311–312, no. 359
  122. ^ Ovalle & Gruen 1998, p. 313, no. 361

Bibliography

Further reading

Writings by Varo

  • Letters, Dreams & Other Writings. Translated by Carson, Margaret. Cambridge, MA: Wakefield Press. 2018. ISBN 9781939663399. OCLC 1060598792.
  • On Homo rodans and Other Writings. Translated by Carson, Margaret. Cambridge, MA: Wakefield Press. 2024. ISBN 9781939663917. OCLC 1412187371.
  • Cartas, sueños y otros textos (in Spanish). Edited by Castells, Isabel. Mexico: Ediciones Era. 1997. ISBN 9789684113947. OCLC 37668687.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • El tejido de los sueños: obra escrita (in Spanish). Edited by Castells, Isabel. Sevilla: Renacimiento. 2023. ISBN 9788419791214. OCLC 1391145047.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)