Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana

Contemporary Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa juxtaposes photographic images of Havana’s architectural ruins with timidly articulated drawings that trace the outlines of the dilapidated buildings in empty urbanscapes. Each of these fragile drawings, often composed of delicate threads adhered to a photog...

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Main Author: Jodi Kovach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2016-11-01
Series:Contemporaneity: Historical Presence in Visual Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://contemporaneity.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/contemporaneity/article/view/130
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spelling doaj-50c4d4516dbc41c489ad055b396e18502020-11-24T22:31:06ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghContemporaneity: Historical Presence in Visual Culture2153-59142016-11-0151728410.5195/contemp.2016.13079Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of HavanaJodi Kovach0Kenyon CollegeContemporary Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa juxtaposes photographic images of Havana’s architectural ruins with timidly articulated drawings that trace the outlines of the dilapidated buildings in empty urbanscapes. Each of these fragile drawings, often composed of delicate threads adhered to a photograph of a site after demolition, serves as a vestige of the sagging structure that the artist photographed prior to destruction. The dialogue that emerges from these photograph/drawing diptychs implies the unmooring of the radical utopian underpinnings of revolutionary ideology that persisted in the policies of Cuba’s Período especial (Special Period) of the 1990s, and suggests a more complicated narrative of Cuba’s modernity, in which the ambiguous drawings—which could indicate construction plans or function as mnemonic images—represent empty promises of economic growth that must negotiate the real socio-economic crises of the present. This article proposes that Garaicoa’s critique of the goals and outcomes of the Special Period through Havana’s ruins suggests a new articulation of the baroque expression— one that calls to mind the anti-authoritative strategies of twentieth-century Neo-Baroque literature and criticism. The artist historically grounds the legacy of the Cuban Revolution’s modernizing project in the country’s real economic decline in the post-Soviet era, but he also takes this approach to representing cities beyond Cuba’s borders, thereby posing broader questions about the architectural symbolism of the 21st-century city in the ideological construction of modern globalizing society.http://contemporaneity.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/contemporaneity/article/view/130Contemporary ArtArchitectural StudiesCubaphotographyWalter BenjaminSevero SarduyNeo-baroqueruins
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jodi Kovach
spellingShingle Jodi Kovach
Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
Contemporaneity: Historical Presence in Visual Culture
Contemporary Art
Architectural Studies
Cuba
photography
Walter Benjamin
Severo Sarduy
Neo-baroque
ruins
author_facet Jodi Kovach
author_sort Jodi Kovach
title Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
title_short Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
title_full Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
title_fullStr Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
title_full_unstemmed Architectural Ruins and Urban Imaginaries: Carlos Garaicoa’s Images of Havana
title_sort architectural ruins and urban imaginaries: carlos garaicoa’s images of havana
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Contemporaneity: Historical Presence in Visual Culture
issn 2153-5914
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Contemporary Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa juxtaposes photographic images of Havana’s architectural ruins with timidly articulated drawings that trace the outlines of the dilapidated buildings in empty urbanscapes. Each of these fragile drawings, often composed of delicate threads adhered to a photograph of a site after demolition, serves as a vestige of the sagging structure that the artist photographed prior to destruction. The dialogue that emerges from these photograph/drawing diptychs implies the unmooring of the radical utopian underpinnings of revolutionary ideology that persisted in the policies of Cuba’s Período especial (Special Period) of the 1990s, and suggests a more complicated narrative of Cuba’s modernity, in which the ambiguous drawings—which could indicate construction plans or function as mnemonic images—represent empty promises of economic growth that must negotiate the real socio-economic crises of the present. This article proposes that Garaicoa’s critique of the goals and outcomes of the Special Period through Havana’s ruins suggests a new articulation of the baroque expression— one that calls to mind the anti-authoritative strategies of twentieth-century Neo-Baroque literature and criticism. The artist historically grounds the legacy of the Cuban Revolution’s modernizing project in the country’s real economic decline in the post-Soviet era, but he also takes this approach to representing cities beyond Cuba’s borders, thereby posing broader questions about the architectural symbolism of the 21st-century city in the ideological construction of modern globalizing society.
topic Contemporary Art
Architectural Studies
Cuba
photography
Walter Benjamin
Severo Sarduy
Neo-baroque
ruins
url http://contemporaneity.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/contemporaneity/article/view/130
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