Diango Hernandez
01 Sep - 04 Nov 2006
DIANGO HERNANDEZ
"Dictators"
(Varadero beach and Guantánamo bay)
Domestic objects twisted by political slogans, so twisted that they decided to become art pieces. Dictators sometimes make us happy and sometimes very sad. They produce anthems, huge monuments, walls and wars, they have the power to become our only god and they last longer than marble. This exhibition presents a group of “phrases and drawings” that talk about the relationship between the dictators and the hope of the victims; showing the art field as a space where personal testimonies can be revealed and can be as effectives as they are on my notebook.
In 1990’s during a trip to Varadero Beach on the 21st of June I saw a “permanent sunset”; the sun stayed longer than usual on the horizon, it was stuck there, half of it was under the water and the other half was burning in the sky, transforming the whole beach into a red place. The sun wasn’t moving but we were. Sunsets are always romantic (see Glen Rubsamen paintings); for some reason sunsets come in the same package as love does, no matter if the love is real or paid. The 21st of June is also the longest day in Cuba and is usually a very beautiful summer day and if you go to Varadero you will see how the blue sky becomes beach and how the beach becomes a place without Cubans. Guantánamo bay and Varadero beach, for completely different reasons, are the only two pieces of Cuban land that Cubans are not allow to step on.
We never went to Guantánamo City, it always was, and it still is today, too faraway from my home town. I got to know about the Guantánamo’s American military base from books at school, but somehow neither books or teachers seduced me enough to travel there; nevertheless I knew about the 2 meter high fence that surrounds the occupied area and I knew also that people living in the villages around the base can reach American television channels using ordinary antennas but can’t get closer to its perimeter because it is covered by anti-personnel landmines.
One day reading a Cuban magazine from the 70’s, I discovered a full page picture of an American soldier showing his ass to a Cuban coastguard who was standing just behind the fence; the article talked about a series of provocations by American soldiers towards Cuban coastguards, provocations that ended up with the death of a Cuban coastguard shot by an American sniper. I cut out the picture of the American soldier’s ass and I glued it into my songbook beside the lyric of Guantanamera. Guajira Guantanamera (1928, "Countryside girl from Guantánamo") is perhaps the best known Cuban song and it tells the story of a beautiful girl born in Guantánamo. This song has a very particular structure and history, it doesn’t just have one composer, it has been modified over time; neither its rhythm or its melody has changed so much but its lyric, in the internationally known version the song includes the first poem in the collection Simple Verses by Cuban poet and National hero José Martí, also known as “El apostol” (The apostle). José Martí has a monument in the Central Park in Havana as well as in Central Park in New York. In the evening of the 3rd of March of 1949 three drunk Americans marines climbed up and pissed on the José Martí’s Havana monument. The next morning after the incident, the picture of the three white uniformed American marines on top of the white marble monument was the highlight of couple of national newspapers. If you have a closer look at that picture you will recognize how bizarre it is, the marines look like three monkeys on top of a white tree, but the most amazing thing about it is how the marines became part of the monument and as a result part of our daily life.
Since I glued the picture of the American solder’s ass into my songbook next to the Guantanamera lyrics I always have fantasized what this beautiful girl from Guantánamo and José Martí would think about the American soldier’s ass, and I am quite sure that they would have a very different opinion about it.
Diango Hernández
Hamburg
12th of July 2006
© Diango Hernandez
"Drawing (Permanent sunset)", 2006. Acrylic, Ink and Water on Paper, Desk, Wire , 138 x 85 cm, Height varies (Detail)
"Dictators"
(Varadero beach and Guantánamo bay)
Domestic objects twisted by political slogans, so twisted that they decided to become art pieces. Dictators sometimes make us happy and sometimes very sad. They produce anthems, huge monuments, walls and wars, they have the power to become our only god and they last longer than marble. This exhibition presents a group of “phrases and drawings” that talk about the relationship between the dictators and the hope of the victims; showing the art field as a space where personal testimonies can be revealed and can be as effectives as they are on my notebook.
In 1990’s during a trip to Varadero Beach on the 21st of June I saw a “permanent sunset”; the sun stayed longer than usual on the horizon, it was stuck there, half of it was under the water and the other half was burning in the sky, transforming the whole beach into a red place. The sun wasn’t moving but we were. Sunsets are always romantic (see Glen Rubsamen paintings); for some reason sunsets come in the same package as love does, no matter if the love is real or paid. The 21st of June is also the longest day in Cuba and is usually a very beautiful summer day and if you go to Varadero you will see how the blue sky becomes beach and how the beach becomes a place without Cubans. Guantánamo bay and Varadero beach, for completely different reasons, are the only two pieces of Cuban land that Cubans are not allow to step on.
We never went to Guantánamo City, it always was, and it still is today, too faraway from my home town. I got to know about the Guantánamo’s American military base from books at school, but somehow neither books or teachers seduced me enough to travel there; nevertheless I knew about the 2 meter high fence that surrounds the occupied area and I knew also that people living in the villages around the base can reach American television channels using ordinary antennas but can’t get closer to its perimeter because it is covered by anti-personnel landmines.
One day reading a Cuban magazine from the 70’s, I discovered a full page picture of an American soldier showing his ass to a Cuban coastguard who was standing just behind the fence; the article talked about a series of provocations by American soldiers towards Cuban coastguards, provocations that ended up with the death of a Cuban coastguard shot by an American sniper. I cut out the picture of the American soldier’s ass and I glued it into my songbook beside the lyric of Guantanamera. Guajira Guantanamera (1928, "Countryside girl from Guantánamo") is perhaps the best known Cuban song and it tells the story of a beautiful girl born in Guantánamo. This song has a very particular structure and history, it doesn’t just have one composer, it has been modified over time; neither its rhythm or its melody has changed so much but its lyric, in the internationally known version the song includes the first poem in the collection Simple Verses by Cuban poet and National hero José Martí, also known as “El apostol” (The apostle). José Martí has a monument in the Central Park in Havana as well as in Central Park in New York. In the evening of the 3rd of March of 1949 three drunk Americans marines climbed up and pissed on the José Martí’s Havana monument. The next morning after the incident, the picture of the three white uniformed American marines on top of the white marble monument was the highlight of couple of national newspapers. If you have a closer look at that picture you will recognize how bizarre it is, the marines look like three monkeys on top of a white tree, but the most amazing thing about it is how the marines became part of the monument and as a result part of our daily life.
Since I glued the picture of the American solder’s ass into my songbook next to the Guantanamera lyrics I always have fantasized what this beautiful girl from Guantánamo and José Martí would think about the American soldier’s ass, and I am quite sure that they would have a very different opinion about it.
Diango Hernández
Hamburg
12th of July 2006
© Diango Hernandez
"Drawing (Permanent sunset)", 2006. Acrylic, Ink and Water on Paper, Desk, Wire , 138 x 85 cm, Height varies (Detail)