Raquel Barros

Raquel Barros Aldunate (2 December 1919 – 11 August 2014) was a Chilean folklorist, noted for her studies and dissemination of Chilean folk music and dance.[1]

Raquel Barros
2009
Born
Raquel Barros Aldunate

(1919-12-02)2 December 1919
Santiago, Chile
Died11 August 2014(2014-08-11) (aged 94)
Santiago, Chile
Resting placeParque del Recuerdo, Santiago
OccupationFolklorist, researcher

Biography

In 1952 Raquel Barros founded the Folkloric Association of Chile, of which she was the director for many years. This group, currently called the Raquel Barros Folkloric Group of Chile, is the oldest such group in the country.[2] Between 1958 and 1980 she was a researcher at the University of Chile at the Institute of Musical Research and then at the Music Department. Barros was vice-dean and assistant dean of the Faculty of Musical Sciences and Arts and Performance of that house of studies between 1974 and 1975. In 1973 she was director of the National Folkloric Ballet.

Barros always combined research with the practice of folklore. Even at an advanced age she was working on the dissemination of Chilean culture. At 82 she headed the cultural center of the Municipality of Recoleta.

In 1996, she was appointed Corresponding Member of the Permanent International Folklore Commission, based in Buenos Aires, Argentina.[3] In 2004 she was a member of the "FONDART" Project Qualification Commission of the National Council of Culture and the Arts.

Raquel Barros died at the Hospital del Salvador in Santiago on 11 August 2014 after suffering a fall at her home.[4]

Publications

Some of Barros' publications include:

  • "El folklore de Chiloé", published by the National Secretariat of Women for the OAS meeting, Santiago, 1976 (with Manuel Dannemann)
  • "La poesía folklórica de Melipilla", Revista Musical Chilena, No. 60, Santiago, 1958
  • "La danza folklórica chilena – Investigación y enseñanza", Revista Musical Chilena, No. 71, Santiago, 1960
  • "El guitarrón en el Depto. de Puente Alto", Revista Musical Chilena, No. 74, Santiago, 1960
  • "Introducción al estudio de la tonada", Revista Musical Chilena, No. 109, Santiago, 1964
  • Guía metodológica para el estudio del folklore chileno, Editorial Universitaria, Santiago, 1964
  • La ruta de la Virgen de Palo Colorado, Santiago, 1966
  • El romancero chileno, Santiago, 1970

In addition Barros made numerous compilations of folk music that are on tapes in the Traditional Music Archive of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Chile.

Honors

Raquel Barros received countless awards and recognitions for her work disseminating Chilean folklore, both in Chile and in other countries. In 1992 she won a medal from the Municipality of Santiago for her contribution to traditional Chilean culture; this municipality had already given her a medal in 1971 when the 20 years of the Chilean Folkloric Association were approaching. Several municipalities and other Chilean organizations have recognized her work, including the Municipality of Talagante (1992), the Industrial Development Society (1993), the Council of Music (1996), the Ministry of Education (2000), the National Folklore Prize of the San Bernardo Festival (2000),[5] and the Chilean Cueca Samuel Claro Valdés Award (2009).[6] In 2013 she received the Altazor Award in the Traditional Folklore – Researcher category.[7] In 2014 she received the Pablo Neruda Order of Artistic and Cultural Merit along with 11 other personalities from her country's artistic field.[8]

References

  1. "Murió la reconocida folclorista e investigadora Raquel Barros" [The Distinguished Folklorist and Researcher Raquel Barros Dies] (in Spanish). Radio Cooperativa. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  2. "Raquel Barros Aldunate: Folklore's 'Grand Damme'". Nuestro.cl. December 2001. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  3. "Oreste Plath". La Tercera Icarito (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 28 February 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  4. Alarcón, Rodrigo (11 August 2014). "Adiós a Raquel Barros, pionera de la investigación folclórica en Chile" [Goodbye to Raquel Barros, Pioneer of Folkloric Research in Chile] (in Spanish). University of Chile. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  5. Martínez Miranda, Carlos. "Anfolchi y Raquel Barros: año de La Tonada" (in Spanish). Bligoo. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  6. Silva Rivera, Ricardo (9 December 2009). "Raquel Barros y Osvaldo Gajardo ganadores del Premio a la Cueca 'Samuel Claro Valdés'" [Raquel Barros and Osvaldo Gajardo Winners of the 'Samuel Claro Valdés' Cueca Award] (in Spanish). Cuecachilena.cl. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  7. "Revisa los ganadores de los Premios Altazor 2013" [Check the Winners of the 2013 Altazor Awards] (in Spanish). Radio Cooperativa. May 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  8. "Consejo de la Cultura entrega Orden al Mérito Pablo Neruda a 12 personalidades del mundo artístico nacional" [Council of Culture Awards Pablo Neruda Order of Merit to 12 Personalities of the National Artistic Field] (in Spanish). National Council of Culture and the Arts. 30 January 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
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