Contemporary Art from Cuba (Arte Contemporaneo de Cuba) : Irony and Survival on the Utopian Island (Ironia y Sobrovivencia en la Isla Utopica)
, by Mosquera, Gerardo; Mosquera, Gerardo; Eligio, Antonio; Arizona State University University Art Museum- ISBN: 9780929445052 | 0929445058
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 1/1/2001
The poetic birth of Cuba, and of the character of its culture, might be found in a phrase placed in the mouth of an aborigine of the island and included in a book by the Cuban writers Cintio Vitier and Fina Garcia Marruz, who traced and assembled such outbursts of inadvertent poetry. As is well known, the Spaniards arrived in America by way of the Antilles, which have always formed a sort of aquatic frontier of the continent. In addition to a thirst for gold, the peculiar geography of the area awakened another obsession in Christopher Columbus and his followers that was to last for years: to know if the landscape they were seeing was an island or terra firma. Cuba's elongated shape and its relatively considerable size tended to disorient them. An obscure historian of the nineteenth century, the priest of the Cuban village of Los Palacios, tells us that when Columbus asked the natives of Cuba if the place was island or continent, they answered him that it was "an infinite land of which no one had ever seen the end, although it was an island". Cuba was thus born