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Ivan Blatný

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Name
  
Ivan Blatny

Role
  
Poet


Parents
  
Lev Blatny

Books
  
The drug of art

Ivan Blatny Tak jdete pomalu po mst dtstv duhamzkcz

Died
  
August 5, 1990, Colchester, United Kingdom

Similar People
  
Josef Kainar, Jiri Kolar, Jindrich Chalupecky, Jirina Haukova, Kamil Lhotak

Podzim ivan blatn


Ivan Blatný [ivan blatniː] (December 21, 1919, Brno, Czechoslovakia – August 5, 1990, Colchester, United Kingdom) was a Czech poet and a member of Skupina 42 (Group 42).

Contents

Ivan Blatný imgceskatelevizeczprogramporady151644foto09

Ivan blatn 1919 1990 part 2


Life

Ivan Blatný Ivan Blatn Martin Reiner

Blatný, the son of the writer Lev Blatný, was a member of the Skupina 42 (Group 42 - association of Czech modern artists). In March 1948, after the communist seizure of power in his native country, Blatný left his country - just one of many figures in Czech Literature who chose to emigrate rather than go underground. However, he found life in exile difficult, as did many other émigré Czech writers such as Ivan Diviš. During his subsequent life in the United Kingdom, he spent time in various mental hospitals.

Ivan Blatný Radio Prague Ivan Blatn a great Czech poet lost and found

From 1984 until shortly before his death, he lived in a retirement home in Clacton-on-Sea. A plaque commemorating his stay can be seen on the wall of the Edensor Care Home in Orwell Road. His ashes were taken to the central cemetery in Brno.

Works

Ivan Blatný Radio Prague Ivan Blatny the strange story of a Czech poet in

At the beginning of his career, Blatný mostly wrote using conventional rhyming and rhythmic forms such as alexandrine quatrains, most notably in the Brno Elegies (Czech, Melancholické procházky; Prague: Melantrich, 1941). The correct translation of the Czech title is 'Melancholic Walks', but Blatný's original title Brněnské elegie was forbidden by the war-time censor for its suggestion that the poet might have been regretful about the German invasion of Czechoslovakia. The poems themselves make no reference whatsoever to contemporary events, but concentrate on Brno and its hinterland, with a beautiful hypnotic lyricism.

Publications

Ivan Blatný Ivan Blatn 1919 1990 part 1 YouTube

  • Melancholické procházky (Prague: Melantrich, 1941)
  • Tento večer (1945)
  • Hledání přítomného času (1947)
  • Stará bydliště (1979)
  • Pomocná škola Bixley (1979; Praha: KDM 1982)
  • Ivan Blatný: The Drug of Art. Selected Poems, ed. Veronika Tuckerová (New York: Ugly Duckling Presse, 2007). Translations by Anna Moschovakis, Matthew Sweney, Justin Quinn, Veronika Tuckerová, Alex Zucker.
  • Criticism

  • Nenik, Francis, The Marvel of Biographical Bookkeeping. Translated from German by Katy Derbyshire, Readux Books 2013, Sample.
  • Hejda, Zbyněk, 'Passer-By: The Poetry of Ivan Blatný'. Metre 12 (Autumn 2002): 171-84.
  • See also, Ivan Blatný: The Drug of Art (2007) for essays by Josef Škvorecký, Veronika Tuckerová and Antonín Petruželka.
  • Review of The Drug of Art, by David Wheatley, Contemporary Poetry Review (October 2008)[1]
  • References

    Ivan Blatný Wikipedia