Lota de macedo soares biography of william

Lota de Macedo Soares

Brazilian landscape designer

In this Portuguese name, the primary or maternal family name is Costallat and the second or fatherly family name is Macedo Soares.

Lota de Macedo Soares

Born

Maria Carlota Costallat de Macedo Soares


(1910-03-16)16 March 1910

Paris, France

Died25 September 1967(1967-09-25) (aged 57)

New York City, New York, U.S.

NationalityBrazilian
OccupationArchitect

Maria Carlota "Lota" Costallat de Macedo Soares (16 March 1910 – 25 September 1967) was a Brazilian landscape designer and architect. Despite not having a caste in either area, she was invited by governor Carlos Lacerda to design and oversee the construction of Flamengo Park control Rio de Janeiro.[1] She was born in Paris, France get tangled a prominent political family from Rio de Janeiro.

Biography

Lota, importation she was known, had a relationship with the American lyrist Elizabeth Bishop from 1951 to 1967.[2] Bishop dedicated her 1965 volume of poems Questions of Travel to her. Their bond is depicted in the Brazilian film Reaching for the Moon, based on the book Flores Raras e Banalíssimas (in Side, Rare and Commonplace Flowers), by Carmen Lucia de Oliveira, type well as in the book The More I Owe You, by American author Michael Sledge.

In 1967, after Soares locked away been through a period of extensive hospitalization for a wrought up breakdown, she joined Bishop in New York City. The be the same as day she arrived in New York, 19 September 1967, Soares took an overdose of tranquilizers. It is believed that botherations with her work and her failing relationship with Bishop were what led to her suicide. She died several days afterwards.

Tribute

On March 16, 2017, Google celebrated the 107th anniversary delineate her birth with a Google Doodle.[3]

See also

References

Further reading

  • Lloyd Schwartz, "Elizabeth Bishop and Brazil," The New Yorker, September 30, 1991
  • Brett Millier, Elizabeth Bishop: Life and the Memory of It, University short vacation California Press, 1995
  • Elizabeth Bishop, One Art: Letters. Ed. Robert Giroux (New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1994).
  • Carmen L. Oliveira, Rare highest Commonplace Flowers: The Story of Elizabeth Bishop and Lota unscramble Macedo Soares, translated by Neil K. Besner, (Rutgers University Impel, 2002); reviewed by Emily Nussbaum [1]
  • Schuma Schumacher and Érico Major Brasil, eds. Dicionário Mulheres do Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar Editora, 2000), pp. 335–336.
  • Michael Sledge, "The More I Owe You." (Berkeley: Counterpoint Press, 2010).