Aemilia Laracuen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aemilia Laracuen (Emilia MacKinley) (1925-2007) was an American artist and muse of poet Robert Graves

Aemilia Laracuen inspired many of Graves’s love poems and was also the illustrator of one of his best-known poetry anthologies, Love Respelt.[1][2]

Graves was Oxford’s professor of poetry between 1961 and 1966, He met and became involved with the American Mexican when she was thirty and he was in his mid-sixties. After meeting in New York, Graves persuaded her to come to live near him in Deià on Majorca. His wife seemingly tolerated this affair.

The 37-year age gap between Aemilia and Graves did not bother her, she said. "Robert was great-looking and in good shape. He had a brilliant mind, was very funny and charming." [3]

Graves became so besotted with Aemilia that he bought her a house in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. And yet she took a lover, the beat poet Howard Hart, to live there.[4]

Their letters are documented and stored at the University of Victoria.[5] Under an agreement with the Graves family, they were not to be read until his widow Beryl had died. Beryl passed away in late 2003.

The correspondence between Robert Graves and Aemilia Laracuen is now being edited by Dr. James Donald Gifford. James is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the University of Victoria.[6]

Aemelia married for the third time and for the last years of her life, after her third divorce, retained her married name Emilia MacKinley. She lived her later years travelling between Puerto Vallarta and New York City.]