The title, "Shipwrecked of Reason," refers to Cuba’s geographic context; it's surrounded by the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea, and the Atlantic Ocean. “Being in [Cuba], your mind goes on a trip that it would never go anywhere else as an artist,” says Pérez. The geographic, social, and political conditions of the island contribute to a unique type of creativity that emerges in Cuban artists, she explains.
Byron Swart, curator and artistic director of Pompano Beach Cultural Center, says, “Cuba is isolated in the ocean, but all experiences in Cuba can relate to worldwide experiences. It makes it all the more powerful because they are completely isolated from everyone, yet their art has made massive and drastic influences on the world.”
The themes of the exhibition are memory, identity, body and portrait, territory and landscape, and the construction of history. The artworks contain global thematic representations, but also self-referential and political ones. Perez says, “It’s impossible to do art in Cuba without some kind of political representation. In the past 50 years, Cuban art has been represented as a criticism to politics and has become a contestatory art, a protest against politics.”
Nadal
Another work in the show, Jose Manuel Fors’
"Shipwrecked of Reason" contains a diverse configuration of media, themes, and content, but the differences all converge on the location: Cuba. Swart concludes, “Contemporary Cuban artists have made a drastic impact on the art world. They can stand up against contemporary artists of New York, Paris, or London.”
"Shipwrecked of Reason: Half a Century in Cuban Art"
5:30 p.m. Thursday, May 11, through July 31 at the Pompano Beach Cultural Center and Library, 50 W. Atlantic Blvd., Pompano Beach; ccpompano.org. Admission is free. The opening follows a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new center.