Mário Dionísio de Assis Monteiro (July 16, 1916, in Lisbon, Portugal – November 17, 1993, in Lisbon, Portugal) was a Portuguese critic, writer, painter, and professor.[1]
A multifaceted personality – poet, novelist, essayist, critic, painter – Mário Dionísio had a significant civic and cultural impact on 20th-century Portugal, particularly in the realms of literature and art.[2]
Biography
Mário Dionísio de Assis Monteiro was born on July 16, 1916, in Lisbon.[3][4]
He was the son of Eurico Monteiro, a merchant and militia officer in the Military Administration, and Julieta Goulart Parreira Monteiro, a homemaker who had completed advanced studies in Piano. He is the father of Eduarda Dionísio.[4]
He graduated in Romance Philology in 1940 from the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon.
He worked as a high school and secondary school teacher and later as a lecturer at the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon, following the April 25th Revolution.[4]
O mundo dos outros: histórias e vagabundagens (preface). Lisbon: Dom Quixote, 2000. Pocket Library Collection, Literature, 13. ISBN972-20-1879-5
Poesia completa. Lisbon: National Press — Casa da Moeda, 2016. Plural Collection. ISBN978-972-27-2450-0[13]
Prose
O dia cinzento: contos. Coimbra: Coimbra Editora, 1954. New Prosecutors Collection.[14]
Não há morte nem princípio. Mem Martins: Europa-América, 1969. Collection of works by Mário Dionísio, 4.[15]
Monólogo a duas vozes: histórias. Lisbon: D. Quixote, 1986. Portuguese Language Authors Collection.[16]
A morte é para os outros. Lisbon: O Jornal, 1988. Dias de Prosa Collection.[17]
Painting
Vincent Van Gogh: study. S.l., s.n., 1947. The Great Painters and Sculptors Collection.
A paleta e o mundo. Lisboa: Europa-América, 1956–1962, 3 vols.[18]
Conflito e unidade da arte contemporânea. Lisboa: Iniciativas Editoriais, 1958.[19]
Awards and honors
Mário Dionísio was awarded the Grand Prize for Essay (1963) by the Portuguese Writers' Society in 1963 for his work A Paleta e o Mundo (English: The Palette and the World).[20]
For the work "Terceira Idade," Mário Dionísio received the Criticism Prize from the Portuguese Center of the International Association of Literary Critics (CPAICL) (1981), tied with Alexandre O'Neill.[21]
He was honored in the toponymy of Lisbon with the naming of a street in the Lumiar parish. This was decided on July 20, 2005, and announced in an official decree on August 1 of the same year by the Lisbon City Council.[22] The Mário Dionísio street was inaugurated on October 26, 2016.[23]
"Biografia : Mário Dionísio". in Dicionário Cronológico de Autores Portugueses, Vol. IV, Lisbon, 1997 (via Direção-Geral do Livro, dos Arquivos e das Bibliotecas)