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Puerto Rico Ilustrado was a weekly magazine in Puerto Rico. Its first issue was published 6 March 1910 in San Juan, Puerto Rico , with Juan M. Saavedra as administrator. [ 7 ] The final issue of Puerto Rico Ilustrado as an independent publication was número 2227, published 27 December 1952.
The Puerto Rico Ilustrado/El Mundo Building represents the embodiment of all the architectural trends of Puerto Rico during the 1920s. As with the other high-rise buildings established at the time in the area, it closely follows the typology of the Chicago school of architecture such as the use of steel-frame buildings with terracotta cladding.
From 1938 to 1949, he was the director of the magazine "Puerto Rico Illustrado", there he published some of his poems under the name of Raimundo Lucio. [1] Among his written works are the following: [1] "Antología de poetas jóvenes de Puerto Rico" (Anthology of young poets of Puerto Rico) (1918) "Crónicas frívolas" (Frivolous Chronics) (1938)
The 5 July 1852 cover page of "El Eco del Comercio", a newspaper published in Ponce between 1857 and 1867 The 8 October 1884 issue of El Avisador Ponceño. This is a list of newspapers in Puerto Rico.
Reforma de Salud de Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico Health Reform) – locally referred to as La Reforma ('The Reform') – is a government-run program which provides medical and health care services to the indigent and impoverished, by means of contracting private health insurance companies, rather than employing government-owned hospitals and ...
El Imparcial, founded in 1918, was "an anti-Popular, pro-Independence tabloid" [4] in Puerto Rico. It circulated daily, except Sundays. [5] Its full name was El Imparcial: El diario ilustrado de Puerto Rico. [6] El Imparcial was given new life in 1933 under the leadership of Antonio Ayuso Valdivieso. [7]
The most prominent ilustrados were Graciano López Jaena, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Mariano Ponce, Antonio Luna and José Rizal, the Philippine national hero.Rizal's novels Noli Me Tangere ("Touch Me Not") and El Filibusterismo ("The Subversive") "exposed to the world the injustices imposed on Filipinos under the Spanish colonial regime".
Antonio Lopez (February 11, 1943 – March 17, 1987) was a Puerto Rican fashion illustrator whose work appeared in such publications as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Elle, Interview and The New York Times. Several books collecting his illustrations have been published. n his obituary, the New York Times called him a "major fashion illustrator."