Víctor Flores Olea
Víctor Flores Olea was a Mexican academic, writer, photographer, and diplomat. He held positions at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and in the federal government, and he represented his country as ambasador to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and as permanent representative to the United Nations. His published books comprised both fiction and non-fiction, as well as collections of his photographs.
Professional life
Víctor Flores Olea was born in Toluca, State of Mexico, in 1932. He studied law at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and pursued postgraduate studies in Paris and Rome.He was the director of the Centre for Latin American Studies at the UNAM's School of Political and Social Sciences from 1966 to 1969; his tenure coincided with the 1968 students' movement, during which he served as an intermediary between the authorities and the protesting students. He was later appointed the director of the FCPyS, a position that he held from 1970 to 1975. He left in 1975 upon his appointment as ambassador to the Soviet Union, where he served for two years. Between 1977 and 1978 he was the under-secretary for culture at the Secretariat of Public Education and, from 1977 to 1982, he was Mexico's permanent delegate to UNESCO. He was also the under-secretary for multilateral affairs at the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs in 1982–1988 and, from 1988 to 1992, the first president of the newly created National Council for Culture and Arts.
In March 1994, he was appointed permanent representative of Mexico to the United Nations. During his tenure, he spoke out against Security Council Resolution 940 authorising a multinational military invention in Haiti. He was replaced by Manuel Tello Macías in February 1995.
In later life, he was a researcher at the UNAM's, where he worked on international relations and political systems and published his last two books.
As a writer he published both fiction and academic studies. During the 1950s he was the assistant editor of the Medio Siglo magazine of the and he later wrote for a range of newspapers and magazines, including El Universal, Excélsior, La Jornada, Nexos and Siempre!.
He was also a photographer: he published several collections of his photographs, and Mexico City's Museum of Modern Art hosted a one-man show of his work in 1977; in addition, he participated in collective exhibitions in various other countries.
He was also instrumental in the 1994 creation of the, a CONACULTA-run cultural centre dedicated to photography that stands alongside the Biblioteca de México José Vasconcelos in a remodelled 18th-century tobacco processing plant in central Mexico City.
Víctor Flores Olea died in Acapulco, Guerrero, on 22 November 2020, at the age of 88.
Condolences were expressed by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who had studied under him, and by Secretary of Culture Alejandra Frausto.