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Presença

Presença
Presença.jpg
Cover of an issue of Presença
Year founded 1927
Final issue 1940
Country Portugal
Language Portuguese

Presença - Folha de Arte e Crítica (Portuguese for "Presence") was a Portuguese review published in Coimbra from 10 March 1927 until 1940 and published 54 volumes.

With different experiences in a short time, with Tríptico which was the important moment in history, João Gaspar Somões and Branquinho da Fonseca founded in 1927 for the series that was famous with the Conimbrigian leaves , it was mainly headed by José Régio. Branquinho da Fonseca no longer headed the review after the 27th volume in 1930, for considering an imposition on creative freedom, an answer generally understood as an reaction on the rise of Régio. A part of the 33rd volume made on November 1938, the review passed against with the presence on its tripartite heading by Adolfo Casais Monteiro. A year later, the revista was reformulated, started a new series with a large format and with more pages. The review serecary was Alberto de Serpa and published about two volumes, November 1939 and February 1940. Presença review started to be dissolved due to ideological struggles between Gaspar Simões and Casais Monteiro.

Although secondarily, it had controlled the arts, Presença published texts under the area of Diogo de Macedo, José Régio, and battled the review served the support of the First Independent Salon in 1930. Writers that worked with the review including the men from First Modernism, Adolfo Correia Rocha, later on, he used some pseudonums including Miguel Torga, Aquilino Ribeiro, Edmundo de Bettencourt, Carlos Queiroz, Júlio/Saul Diar and all the generations of poets, prosers, pensioners and plastic artists, which simply called "the presence generation" or its presenters. Numerous writers that published the magazine included Almada Negreiros, Júlio Diogo de Macedo, Dordio Gomes, Sarah Afonso, Arlindo Vicente, Bernardo Marques, Mário Eloy, João Carlos, Paulo Ferreira, Ventura Porfírio, Arpaz Szenes, Maria Helena Vieira da Silva (in 1940), etc.


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