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Rocky shoreline at Isla Negra, in the Valparaíso Region, Chile Casa de Isla Negra house museum of Pablo Neruda, in Isla Negra. Isla Negra is a coastal area in El Quisco commune in central Chile, some 45 km (70 km by road) south of Valparaiso and 96 km (110 km by road) west of Santiago.
Casa de Isla Negra was one of Pablo Neruda's three houses in Chile. It is located at Isla Negra, a coastal area of El Quisco commune, located about 45 km south of Valparaíso and 96 km west of Santiago. It was his favourite house and where he and his third wife, Matilde Urrutia, spent the majority of their time in Chile. Neruda, a lover of the ...
Las Bordadoras de Isla Negra (English: The Embroiderers of Isla Negra) were a women's sewing group from the coastal town of Isla Negra, Chile.The group achieved worldwide recognition in the late-1960s and early-1970s for embroidered tapestries that depicted scenes from the women's personal experience, everyday life, and local and national histories.
Heritage house of Isidoro Dubournais []. El Quisco is a Chilean city and commune in San Antonio Province, Valparaíso Region.Located in the country's central coast, it serves as a popular summer resort for the population of Santiago and forms part of the Coast of Poets, a cultural space named after four Chilean poets: Pablo Neruda, Vicente Huidobro, Violeta Parra and Nicanor Parra.
The Casa de Isla Negra is also to be found here, [3] now Neruda's place of burial, together with his wife Matilde. On one of his many returns to Chile, in 1937, the poet sought an ideal place to write his celebrated work Canto General. Neruda bought the site of Isla Negra from a Spanish former sailor who settled in the area following the ...
Neruda owned three houses in Chile; today, they are all open to the public as museums: La Chascona in Santiago, La Sebastiana in Valparaíso, and Casa de Isla Negra in Isla Negra, where he and Matilde Urrutia are buried.