Grigore Cugler Gregório (Gregori) Cugler | |
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Born | Roznov, Neamț County, Kingdom of Romania | April 20, 1903
Died | September 30, 1972 Lima, Peru | (aged 69)
Pen name | Apunake |
Occupation | short story writer, poet, humorist, illustrator, composer, violinist, diplomat |
Nationality | Romanian |
Period | 1934–1972 |
Genre | sketch story, lyric poetry, satire, parody, memoir |
Literary movement | avant-garde |
Grigore Cugler (Romanian pronunciation: [ɡriˈɡore ˈkuɡler]; Spanish: Gregorio or Gregori Cugler; also known under the pen name Apunake; April 20 [O.S. April 7] 1903 – September 30, 1972) was a Romanian avant-garde short story writer, poet and humorist. Also noted as a graphic artist, composer and violinist, he was a decorated World War I veteran who served as the Romanian Kingdom's diplomatic representative in various countries before and after World War II. The nephew of poet Matilda Cugler-Poni, he was the author of unconventional and often irreverentious pieces, which have drawn parallels with the work of Alfred Jarry and Urmuz. Their author was celebrated by some of his generation colleagues for his independent voice in Romanian literature.
An anti-communist, Cugler renounced his post in 1947, just before the establishment of a communist regime, and lived the final decades of his life in Peru. Promoted by the Romanian diaspora but largely ignored at home until the Romanian Revolution of 1989, he became the subject of interest in post-communist literary criticism.