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50 Years of
Cuban Life in the Work and Words of 25 Photographers
About the
Exhibit
This exhibit updates the Centers excellent 1985 photography exhibit at the Ledel
Gallery in New York City (“40 Years”). The photographers included are the
original 20 plus five: Tito Alvarez, Constantino Arias, Ivan
Cañas, Corrales, Mario Díaz, Ernesto Fernández,
Mario Ferrer, José Alberto Figueroa, Abigail García,
Gory, Grandal, Ernesto Javier, Korda, Raúl
Martínez, Marucha, Mayito, José Ney, Max
Orlando, Pirole, Rolando Pujol, Rigoberto Romero,
José Tabío Palma, Osvaldo Salas, and Vidal.
The exhibit consists of 100 black and white images, covering the period of the
1940s to the 1990s, several videotapes which include interviews with some of
the photographers (including Corrales and Korda) and documentary films covering the same
period. A few of the photographs are framed, but most will be sent in protective envelopes
to be prepared for exhibition as desired by the renting institution. Each photograph has
an identifying caption card, and an exhibit list shows which of the photographs can be
ordered. The exhibit is also accompanied by catalogues from the first exhibit and by sets
of eight postcard images from the show, both of which can be sold during the exhibit.
Rental fees vary with the number of photographs requested, and the exhibit period of time. 100 photographs for one month is $10,000. 50 photographs for one month is $6,000, but we will always try to work out something satisfactory for each institution.
The excellent 64-page catalogue includes an introductory essay by critic
Max Kozloff, 20 images, biographies of and quotes from the photographers, and essays by
anthropologist Johnnetta B. Cole (formerly president of Spelman College) and political
scientist Richard R. Fagen. Excerpts from the introduction are included below.
From the Catalogue
Critic Max Kozloff, in his perceptive introduction to the 1985 exhibit, writes:
“Photography is the least known and yet one of the most revealing and instructive
of the arts through which revolutionary Cuba has reflected upon itself. . . . Despite the
necessary fragmentary character of photographic pictures, and the individualistic,
comparatively unorganized working conditions of the photographers themselves, their images
lead towards an integral understanding, from the inside, of a country that has been
consistently distorted, when not ignored, by outside media. . . .
“Of course, what sets the Cubans apart is their revolution. For 25 years, among
the tropical and undeveloped Latin American countries, so many of whose rulers caused
their citizens to disappear, there existed, quite alone, a governmental form
and a social model of a very different kind, invested in the comprehensive delivery of
social welfare, hemmed in by the U.S. economic blockade, burdened by the gravest material
problems, but liberated from the general grief. The Cuban photographers . . . matured as
picture-makers in an unprecedented situation, one that assumed the atmosphere of trust,
and the sharing of fundamental values, to be nation-wide.
“We have only to compare some good Cuban photography of
the Batista era with the
work that came after 1959 to see the psychological change brought by the revolution to the
technical images. José Tabío Palma and Constantino Arias were serious professionals, the
first devoted to a softly lit elegy of the rural poor, and the second, a flash publicity
photographer sometimes operating out of the Hotel Nacional, and then in the rumba palaces,
cabarets, or along the resort beaches and tourist casinos of the capital. If Arias was
required to do justice to gringo bacchanals, and he covered the political
carnival of the time (1950s), he also studied the raffish backstreets or
seedy courtyards, the dudes and hookers there, cafe life and lottery vendors, all of them
illuminated by an icy and often sardonic flash. Tabío and Arias offered a quite
thoroughgoing critique of the cliché of Cuba as paradise island and of Havana as fun
city. . . .
"All that dissolves in Raúl Corrales justly famous picture of guerrilla
horsemen entering the United Fruit Companys plantation in 1959. For me this has
always been a charming photograph, and its charm stemmed from a hunch that these tough
conquerors from the sierra didnt know too much about riding horses. . . . When
Corrales explained that the caballeros were symbolically re-enacting a plantation
takeover during the 1895 War of Independence, my idea was confirmed and the charm was
enhanced. In this amiable charade, theres no need to dwell on the obvious
associations of the straw hats and the forward march. Much more important, even for
political significance, is the psychological stance of the image. Not only are subjects
and photographer equal participants in a historical event, their mood brings spectators
right in, as if they, too, were engaged in an act of national re-possession. Here is one
of the great welcoming images in the history of photography, all the more irresistible and
buoyant because it seems such a lark.
"Unlike other Latin American photography, that of revolutionary Cuba favored icons
or symbols of national consciousness. José Figueroa has a series called That
Flag, and Mario Díaz titles his My Flag. Raúl Martínez often frames
flag posters and colors them in black and white photographs. . . .
"Cuban photography can display
a fine sensual appetite for the world, but its most seductive element is its
rhetoric of social inclusion. The freshness of its campaign consists in
this: that its social transactions continue unreflectively past the frame,
or rather that the ‘frame’ is re-defined as the national community in which
viewers, no less than subjects, are cast together . .
"Given the scantiness and the de facto blackout of U.S. media coverage of Cuban
life, the information contained in these photographs is especially useful. Aside from
their material data, however, these images show how many Cubans have perceived themselves,
since their revolution, and that is valuable. There is the outer history of the island,
big events recorded by official photo-journalists: Fidel in the Sierra
Maestra, the great
masses in the Plaza de la Revolución, the Bay of Pigs invasion repelled, the missile
crisis, and mass protests at the Mariel exodus of 1980. Throughout all Cuban photography,
eyes flash in anger only at Mariel, where it was demonstrated that a very sizable chunk of
the Cuban people, for the most varied reasons, had opted out of the revolution. . . .
"
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