The Center for Cuban Studies

Welcome to the Cuban Art Space

Cuban art is very little known in the United States, especially that made by artists who are still living and working in Cuba. Our intention is to promote the work of Cuban artists.
Given the decades-long break in relations between Cuba and the United States, this is not easy. But we start with a certain advantage: the Center for Cuban Studies has been working on cultural exchange programs for many years.
In 1991, the Center spearheaded a successful lawsuit against the U.S. Treasury Department, which made the importation and sale of original art from Cuba legal. Over the years the Center has accumulated a collection of several thousand art works, posters and photographs by Cuban artists, as well as handmade books.
In the pages of this web site, you'll be treated to a sampling of our collection. We have pages for the current exhibit in the Art Space gallery, art and poster exhibits for rent, artifacts and art for sale, Center organized art and architecture focused research trips to Cuba.

The Center for Cuban Studies is celebrating 2009, the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution, with a calendar dedicated to the inspired series of 20 silkscreens about the rebel attack on Fort Moncada in Santiago de Cuba on July 26, 1953
ORDER IT NOW!

UPCOMING EVENTS

Since our move to new quarters (we are now at 231 West 29th Street, #401, New York NY 10001, between 7th and 8th Avenues), we have been busy organizing our artworks into smaller space and preparing the new gallery, which is almost finished!

MABEL POBLET PUJOL Mirando adentro / Looking Within

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The Cuban Art Space of the Center for Cuban Studies opens its new gallery space at 231 West 29th Street on September 12 with an exciting new Cuban artist. “Looking Within” (Mirando adentro) is a show of mixed media works by this 22-year-old artist. The works are a close examination of her own short life, who she is, where she came from (an early series was called “Place of Origin”), her relationships with family, friends and lovers. Mabel’s work is intensely personal, even emotional, but it is never sentimental. It is precise and carefully crafted. A large work shown in New York in 2006,* for example, consisted of 3,136 tiny screen prints of herself as a baby, and when viewed from a distance a current portrait of herself emerges. It was put together with 12,544 nails on canvas nearly eight feet by six feet. (The fact that she KNOWS how many prints and nails is telling.)

In her earliest works on paper, starting when she was 16, she used family photographs and collages with her drawings to tell the story of a divided family, one she brought together in her art. Her parents’ divorce disappears in these works, mother and father surround their daughter in a loving relationship. Her own beautiful face and body, vulnerable, even modest while naked (sometimes age three, sometimes 20) seems to float through an uncertain world. Leaving her home in Cienfuegos to study art in Havana and live with an accomplished artist at only 17 could not have been easy. Yet she seemed to take it all in stride because of her art, and with her art.

Another 2006 work** is a sort of Venetian blind: one side is constructed of hundreds of tiny screen prints of her as a baby and from a distance the image is her family home in Cienfuegos; when flipped, the small prints are of the 17 year old Mabel and the larger image is of the San Alejandro Art Academy.

While this show emphasizes her most recent works, a few early works on paper are included, some done when she was only 17 and 18.

Still studying in the graduate school of art, ISA (she is about to start her second year), Mabel studied at the National Academy of Fine Arts, the famous San Alejandro School, graduating with highest honors. She apprenticed in a workshop started by well known Cuban installation artist Tania Bruguera that brought her together with well-known artists for a year and a half.

This is her fourth personal exhibit and she has taken part in 16 group shows in Cuba, Spain, Portugal and the United States. In one of the most important group shows, that of the invitational homage to the great Cuban painter Antonia Eirez at the Servando Gallery in Havana, she was the youngest artist whose participation was invited, at 20.

Mabel Poblet cannot attend the opening of her first solo show in the United States because of U.S. government restrictions: the State Department seems to think that Cuban artists represent a threat to our national security.

* Collection of Susan and Arnold Lanzilotta, Oak Beach NY
** Collection of David Borde, New York City

The show runs through mid-October. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 11-7 Tuesday-Friday, 12-6 on Saturday. Sundays and Mondays the gallery is open by appointment only.

Check Out Our Latest Sale!

EDUARDO MARÍN AND PEPE MENÉNDEZ

PO2TERS

Gallery 1 | Gallery 2

Jacqueline and Yamilys BRITO
Natural Causes | Causas Naturales

Jacqueline Gallery | Yamilys Gallery


Moving Sale! Summer of Love

Posters Gallery I | Posters Gallery II | Prints Gallery I | Prints Gallery II

Sale of Original Works on Paper and Canvas
Gallery I | Gallery II | Gallery III | Gallery IV


José García Montebravo
Fantasías
JORGE PERUGORRÍA: PAINTINGS
Chivo que rompe tambó . . . / The goat that breaks the tambour . . .
Art Gallery | Jorge Perugorría
Shooting a Revolution
THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF LEE LOCKWOOD
Cuba: The Early Years
Center's 35th Anniversary Sale
ONLINE GALLERIES
Blow-Out Sale of Cuban posters, photos, books and LP's
EDICIONES VIGÍA
Handcrafted Books from Cuba

SPECIAL HOLIDAY EXHIBIT
CRAFTS and SMALL SCULPTURE, RARE ART and POLITICAL POSTERS
El Grupo Bayate 2008 Calendar!
 

The Center for Cuban Studies is celebrating 2009, the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution, with a calendar dedicated to the inspired series of 20 silkscreens about the rebel attack on Fort Moncada in Santiago de Cuba on July 26, 1953
ORDER IT NOW!

Gallery Hours: Tues.- Fri.: 11 noon -7 pm; Sat.: 12 noon - 5 p.m.
231 West 29th Street, #401, New York, Between 7th & 8th Ave.

Postal address for all mail: Center for Cuban Studies, 231 West 29th Street, #401, New York, NY 10001

Telephone: 212.242.0559 • Fax: 212.242.1937

Link to our other web site: http://www.cubaupdate.org