Julio Llamazares is a significant voice in Spanish contemporary literature, known for his profound focus on rural Spain and the decline of forgotten mountain villages. He skillfully captures the essence of worlds that might otherwise be lost to modernization, using unassuming yet convincing narratives of everyday life. His work often delves into themes of memory, forgetting, death, and loneliness, drawing from personal experience and keen observation to create resonant stories.
Part of the Peter Owen World Series: Spain. A moving and thrilling account of
the republican struggle after the Spanish Civil War. A significant novel in
the history of Spanish literature, Wolf Moon was the first novel published in
Spain to lay bare the atrocities and brutal oppression of the Franco regime.
Published on the occasion of the major 2004 retrospective exhibition, Axel Hütte: Terra Incognita, at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid. The catalogue covers key works from 1982-2003, including his portrait typologies. From the publisher: "Axel Hütte, born in Essen in 1951 and a member of Bernd Becher's master class at the Düsseldorf Academy of Art, is one of the group of younger German photographers who, in the past twenty years, have established a firm presence on the international art scene. Early on, Hütte has been fascinated by landscape photography, albeit a broad theme but one in which his particular approach has spawned an almost programmatic portrayal of the confrontation between the city and the countryside. Between pure 'pieces of nature' (mist-shrouded mountain peaks, panoramic jungles and deserts, ocean horizons and night skies) and their opposite (oppressive street vistas that are quite literally dead-ends), Hütte repeatedly moves in some grey zone that is a neither/nor: industrial estates on the edge of town, company buildings in green belts, farmed land, seen through the concrete pillars of new commercial buildings..." Axel Hütte's focus is the confrontation between city and countryside, between foggy mountains, deserts, sea horizons or night skies and uneasy no-exit streets."
The last resident of the Pyrenean village of Ainielle faces death as the first snows fall. In his final moments, his fading memories are filled with the presence of friends and neighbors, sharing in his solitude.