Street Art of Havana: A Photo Essay

L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-dancer-malecon-640x480.jpg?profile=RESIZE_930xDavid Paul Appell

 

In the past decade or two, art has truly been one of the bright spots in Cuba‘s cities, and especially in capital Havana. In addition to a quite fine Museum of Cuban Fine Arts (Calle Trocadero between Zulueta  and Monserrate), with works spanning the early colonial period to just yesterday, these days there are also myriad galleries and shops.

Many of them, especially in Old Havana, traffick largely in tourist kitsch, but you can also find some world-class work in galleries such as Galería Habana in the El Vedado neighbourhood and the Fábrica de Arte Cubano, in the same district.  And if you can make it down for the triennial art extravaganza called Bienal de la Habana (next held in November 2018), it’s truly a big, impressive deal, not just in the Cuban context but also for Latin America in general.

Beyond that, perhaps more than most cities I can name, you can get an eyeful of art just by walking the streets, as increasingly the shabby façades are being enlivened and made more interesting by a growing array of street art – some “official”, some not.

 

L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-Callejon-de-Hamel-shutterstock_128879407-640x427.jpg?profile=RESIZE_930x Evgenia Bolyukh


The oldest examples – dating back to the 1990s – are the colorful wall murals on Centro Habana‘s Callejón de Hamel (above), a center of Afro-Cuban culture where many of the images reflect the African-Catholic hybrid religion known as Santería (go on Sunday around noon, when there’s amazing music and dancing, as well).


L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-jinetera-640x480.jpg?profile=RESIZE_930x David Paul Appell


But there’s mucho more public art these days. Newer works I noticed on my most recent visit included a dramatic sculpture (top) on the malecón waterfront promenade by Rafael San Juan, inspired by the movement and spirit of Cuban National Ballet dancer Viengsay Valdés. And I was mighty surprised to find, in Old Havana’s tourist-popular Plaza Vieja, the social commentary of sculptor Roberto Fabelo‘s nude woman with a fork riding a rooster (above; think of its single-syllable synonym); she is clearly a jinetera (rider), a woman who goes with foreigners to survive, since it’s impossible to survive purely on local salaries.


Here are several other striking bits of street art I spotted on my recent perambulations:

 

L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-Paseo-del-Prado-with-old-blue-car-640x399.jpg?width=640

L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-woman-with-fish-640x480.jpg?width=640

L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-old-car-on-junkyard-door-640x367.jpg?width=640L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-faces-at-bus-stop-599x600.jpg?width=599L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-OReilly-corner-640x480.jpg?width=640L2F-Mar-17-pic-Cuba-Havana-street-art-Paseo-del-Prado-triptych-640x364.jpg?width=640


 

 

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