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Art also worked as space where Cubans debated some of the social problems magnified by the "Special Period", as illustrated by the Queloides art project, which deals with issues of race and discrimination. [44] "Every Cuban is an artist and every home is an art gallery," wrote Rachel Weiss in To and from Utopia in the New Cuban Art. [41]
Eduardo Muñoz Bachs (1937–2001) was a Cuban poster artist and comics artist.He was born on April 12, 1937, in Valencia, Spain, but moved to Cuba with his parents in 1941.
Juan T. Vázquez Martín (1941–2017), Cuban-born American painter, among the masters of abstract paintings in Cuba; Raul Martinez (1927–1995) painter, designer, photographer, muralist, and graphic artist; María Martínez-Cañas (born 1960), photographer; Rene Mederos (1933–1996), poster artist and graphic designer
Luis Vega De Castro (born October 4, 1944 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban artist.Since 1980 he has lived in Miami, Florida, United States.He works in graphic design, painting, drawing and illustration, and has been noted for his work in film posters.
Fototeca de Cuba is Cuba's national archive dedicated to photography and visual culture in the country. It was created in 1986 as a division of the Cuban State Cultural Heritage Fund and is located in Havana. [1] [2] [3] Fototeca de Cuba is one of the largest and most important photography archives in the Caribbean region.
José Gómez Fresquet, renowned Cuban poster maker and graphic artist, recalls how on hearing the news of Guevara's death, he immediately worked all night producing the poster to be used at the rally honoring him the next day. Korda had given Fresquet a copy of the portrait as a basis for the poster, which he created on red paper.
Adriano Nicot; Pedro Pablo Oliva; Gina Pellón; Sandra Ramos; Roberto Álvarez Ríos; Miguel Rodez; Emilio Hector Rodriguez; Juan Andrés Rodríguez – known as El Monje; Gilberto Andrés Romero Pino
The Museum of Decorative Arts (Spanish: Museo de Artes Decorativas), at 17th and E streets in the Vedado district of Havana, Cuba is a decorative arts museum in the former residence of the María Luisa Gómez-Mena viuda de Cagiga, Countess of Revilla de Camargo, sister of José Gómez-Mena Vila, the owner of the Manzana de Gómez.