Early years Federico del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús García Lorca was born on 5 June 1898, in
Fuente Vaqueros, a small town 17 km west of
Granada, southern Spain. All three of these homes—Fuente Vaqueros, Valderrubio, and Huerta de San Vicente—are today museums. In 1915, after graduating from secondary school, García Lorca attended the
University of Granada. During this time his studies included law, literature, and composition. Throughout his adolescence, he felt a deeper affinity for music than for literature. When he was 11 years old, he began six years of piano lessons with Antonio Segura Mesa, a harmony teacher in the local conservatory and a composer. It was Segura who inspired Federico's dream of a career in music. His first artistic inspirations arose from scores by
Claude Debussy,
Frédéric Chopin and
Ludwig van Beethoven. His milieu of young intellectuals gathered in El Rinconcillo at the Café Alameda in Granada. In 1916 and 1917, García Lorca travelled throughout
Castile,
León, and
Galicia, in northern Spain, with a professor of his university, who also encouraged him to write his first book, ''
(Impressions and Landscapes''—printed at his father's expense in 1918).
Fernando de los Rios persuaded García Lorca's parents to let him move to the progressive,
Oxbridge-inspired
Residencia de Estudiantes in Madrid in 1919, while nominally attending classes at the
University of Madrid. Early in 1922, at Granada García Lorca joined the composer
Manuel de Falla in order to promote the
Concurso de Cante Jondo, a festival dedicated to enhancing
flamenco performance and its
cante jondo style. "During this period, Lorca explored the brief genre of songs, exemplified by the poem 'Orchard, March', which was written between 1921 and 1924 and later collected in his book Canciones." The year before, García Lorca had begun to write his ''
("Poem of the Deep Song", not published until 1931), so he naturally composed an essay on the art of flamenco, and began to speak publicly in support of the Concurso
. At the music festival in June, he met the celebrated Manuel Torre, a flamenco cantaor
. The next year in Granada he also collaborated with Falla and others on the musical production of a play for children, La niña que riega la albahaca y el príncipe preguntón
(The Girl that Waters the Basil and the Inquisitive Prince
) adapted by Lorca from an Andalusian story. Inspired by the same structural form of sequence as "Deep Song", his collection Suites'' (1923) was never finished and was not published until 1983. Lorca's sketches were a blend of popular and avant-garde styles, complementing
Canción. Both his poetry and drawings reflected the influence of traditional
Andalusian motifs,
Cubist syntax, and a preoccupation with sexual identity. Several drawings consisted of superimposed dreamlike faces (or shadows). He later described the double faces as self-portraits, showing "man's capacity for crying as well as winning," in line with his conviction that sorrow and joy were as inseparable as life and death.
Romancero gitano (
Gypsy Ballads, 1928), part of his Cancion series, became his best-known book of poetry. It was a highly stylised imitation of the ballads and poems that were still being told throughout the Spanish countryside. García Lorca describes the work as a "carved altar piece" of Andalusia with "gypsies, horses, archangels, planets, its Jewish and Roman breezes, rivers, crimes, the everyday touch of the smuggler and the celestial note of the naked children of
Córdoba. A book that hardly expresses visible Andalusia at all, but where the hidden Andalusia trembles." His second play,
Mariana Pineda, with stage settings by Salvador Dalí, opened to great acclaim in
Barcelona in 1927. Although Dali's friendship with Lorca had a strong element of mutual passion, Dalí said he rejected the erotic advances of the poet. With the success of "Gypsy Ballads", came an estrangement from Dalí and the breakdown of a love affair with sculptor
Emilio Aladrén Perojo. These brought on an increasing depression, a situation exacerbated by his anguish over his
homosexuality. He felt he was trapped between the persona of the successful author, which he was forced to maintain in public, and the tortured, authentic self, which he could acknowledge only in private. He also had the sense that he was being pigeon-holed as a "gypsy poet". He wrote: "The gypsies are a theme. And nothing more. I could just as well be a poet of sewing needles or hydraulic landscapes. Besides, this gypsyism gives me the appearance of an uncultured, ignorant and primitive poet that you know very well I'm not. I don't want to be typecast." At this time Dalí also met his future wife
Gala. Aware of these problems (though not perhaps of their causes), García Lorca's family arranged for him to make a lengthy visit to the United States in 1929–30. In June 1929, García Lorca travelled to the US with Fernando de los Rios on the
RMS Olympic, a sister liner to the
RMS Titanic. He also spent time in
Vermont and later in
Havana, Cuba. His collection
Poeta en Nueva York (
Poet in New York, published posthumously in 1940) explores alienation and isolation through some graphically experimental poetic techniques and was influenced by the
Wall Street crash which he personally witnessed. This condemnation of urban capitalist society and materialistic modernity was a sharp departure from his earlier work and label as a folklorist. His play of this time,
El público (
The Public), was not published until the late 1970s and has never been published in its entirety, the complete manuscript apparently lost. However, the
Hispanic Society of America in New York City retains several of his personal letters.
The Second Republic García Lorca's return to Spain in 1930 coincided with the fall of the dictatorship of
Primo de Rivera and the establishment of the
Second Spanish Republic. , Cantabria Travelling to Buenos Aires in 1933, to give lectures and direct the Argentine premiere of
Blood Wedding, García Lorca spoke of his distilled theories on artistic creation and performance in the famous lecture
Play and Theory of the Duende. This attempted to define a schema of artistic inspiration, arguing that great art depends upon a vivid awareness of death, connection with a nation's soil, and an acknowledgement of the limitations of reason. As well as returning to the classical roots of theatre, García Lorca also turned to traditional forms in poetry. His last poetic work,
Sonetos de amor oscuro (
Sonnets of Dark Love, 1936), was long thought to have been inspired by his passion for
Rafael Rodríguez Rapún, young actor and secretary of La Barraca. Documents and mementos revealed in 2012, suggest that the actual inspiration was
Juan Ramírez de Lucas, a 19-year-old with whom Lorca hoped to emigrate to Mexico. The love sonnets are inspired by the 16th-century poet
San Juan de la Cruz. La Barraca's subsidy was cut in half by the rightist government elected in 1934, and its last performance was given in April 1936. Lorca spent summers at the
Huerta de San Vicente from 1926 to 1936. Here he wrote, totally or in part, some of his major works, among them
When Five Years Pass (
Así que pasen cinco años) (1931),
Blood Wedding (1932),
Yerma (1934) and
Diván del Tamarit (1931–1936). The poet lived in the Huerta de San Vicente in the days just before his arrest and assassination in August 1936. Although García Lorca's drawings do not often receive attention, he was also a talented artist. ==Assassination==