A translator and artist who made her debut as a poet with Una cançó per a ningú i trenta diàlegs inútils (A song for no one and thirty useless dialogues), a work that turned he into a finalist for the Carles Riba Award at the age of 63. She trained at the Massana School of Arts and Trades and the Sant Jordi School of Fine Arts, in Barcelona. In 1950, she travelled to Paris, and a year later she decided to settle there permanently. She entered the world of advertising and, at the same time, she privately cultivated her artistic side. Her plastic arts work, still little known, is based on abstract expressionism, although she defines her style as “plurivision”, since her pieces are conceived to be observed from various angles. Her contribution as a multidisciplinary artist specialising in Japanese poetry is also significant. The Felícia Fuster Foundation, which collects paintings, manuscripts and engravings by the artist is located near Plaça Molina.
A translator and artist, she debuted as a poet with Una cançó per a ningú i trenta diàlegs inútils and became a finalist for the Carles Riba award at the age of 63. She has particularly stood out as an expert in Japanese poetry.