“Adios Utopia,” Exhibition of Cuban Art, Walker Art Center, 2018
I am always hesitant when
visiting an art exhibit of any country the U.S. is hostile
to. Given the U.S.
government’s long history of hostility to Cuba, even ‘enlightened’ curators
actually parrot that perspective. The
title itself echoes a bourgeois theme that socialism is ‘utopian.’ The Walker curators used the same word ‘utopia’ to describe a
1960s art exhibit centered around ‘hippies,’ i.e. the same neo-liberal framing of that art show.
The huge difficulties faced by Cuba
after the revolution can mostly to be put at the door of international
capital. Though having ‘socialism on one
island,’ as Che Guevara knew, is impossible and resulted in more problems,
especially modeling government on a one-party state.
At any rate, I do not know
what paintings were left out of this show, as the main focus was not on 60
years of all Cuban art, but 60 years of mostly dissident Cuban art. There was a note on one wall
that due to U.S. attempts to seize ‘confiscated’ goods and return them back to
their original rich owners, some paintings or works were not sent by the
Cuban museums, for good reason.
Cuba never had an official art style like ‘socialist
realism,’ so Cuba’s
influences are freer than the governments who strictly followed Soviet methods. The exhibit notes that the atmosphere in Cuba changed after 1970, when the USSR gained more influence in Cuba due to the
blockade. At that point, attitudes to
art became more narrow. The show
references the misery of the “special period’ after capitalism was restored in
the USSR in 1991 and Russian
aid and trade with Cuba
stopped. It enforced a depressing
poverty on the Cuban people, which had damaging effects.
Nevertheless, the art I saw
clearly says that Cuba is still
a ‘painterly’ society that values art far more than the U.S., which
essentially has no art movements anymore.
For instance, political art has mostly disappeared in the U.S. This exhibit shows a wide range of Cuban
styles, of materials, of methods, of themes.
The small revolutionary art section celebrates the peasants, workers and
leaders of the insurrection against Batista.
The dissident materials poke at bureaucratism, long speeches, crushing
poverty and hints at escape.
There is an odd display of
black and white flags of many U.N. countries.
A large stone sitting on top of thousand’s of real teeth. An outstanding
sculpture of a bloodied Marti as a peasant with a machete. Revolutionary posters and paintings based on
bold, mural styles. Photography showing campesinos
on horseback riding to expropriate a U.S.-owned sugar plantation. Recordings of Castro reciting production
numbers made incoherent and numbing. A painting of a ‘cultural’ meeting in
which the attendees and leaders are shown in a conformist arrangement of
identical individuals, sort of like a Soviet presidium. Photos of Havana’s crumbling buildings propped up by
wooden struts or rusting sugar factories that closed after the Soviet and
eastern European sugar markets dried up.
An arrangement of cement blocks representing the walls around Cuba put up by
the blockade. A huge triangular display
of abstract revolutionary paintings, with Che at the top. A film of ‘Mardi Gras” dancers in the
streets of Havana. A photo of a diver ‘attempting to escape’
over the Malecon.
Styles vary. There was a group of abstract ‘concrete’
painters. Some figurative art similar to
social realism. Poster art. Modernist and geometric art. There were collages and wood and metal
constructivism. Photography and photo-realism. Grotesque paintings of dead
animals. A boat made of books. 3-dimensional
art. Sly attempts at humor. All in all a very varied show,
showing the breadth of a certain strata of Cuban art.
I am still waiting for the Walker, which specializes in post-modernist abstract art
and the terrible version in its ‘Sculpture
Garden,’ to have a show of
anti-capitalist U.S.
art. Then we can make fun of the capitalist 'utopia.' It should be a long wait.
The Walker is free on Thursday evenings, 5 to 9
PM. Show runs through March 17,
2018.
Prior reviews of art
exhibits at the Walker: “Hippie Modernism,” “Frida Kahlo" and
“Edward Hopper. Other museums: Museum of Russian Art
“Women in Soviet Art,” The Hermitage's “Travel Notes - The
Hermitage,” The Minneapolis Institute of Art “Discovering American Art Now.” Uzbekistan’s “Desert
of Forbidden Art.” Book reviews: “9.5 Thesis on Art and Class," “The Marxist Theory of Art.” and Berger’s
“Ways of Seeing.” Commentary on the Tate Modern and Banksy's street art: “Art
Is Dead” and “Left in London.” Commentary on
art crawls in Minneapolis: “The Minneapolis Spectacle."
Red Frog
January 21, 2018
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