21/04/11

Cuban Art Exhibition: Ajiaco at the Newark Museum, New Jersey







Ajiaco: Stirrings of the Cuban Soul 
Newark Museum, NJ 
June 8 - August 14, 2011 

In 1939, anthropologist Fernando Ortiz characterized Cuban culture as ajiaco, a rich stew consisting of a large variety of ingredients. The ingredients of the “stew” include Catholicism brought in by the Spaniards; the spirituality of the Yoruba slaves and their cultural traditions from Africa; and the Chinese indentured servants who brought Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism. The base of the stew is the indigenous people, such as Tainos, who were almost wiped out by the Spaniards. 

AJIACO: STIRRINGS OF THE CUBAN SOUL is a survey of modern and contemporary Cuban artists that explores these rich cultural roots of Cuban art. In contemporary society, the “stew” has become thicker and richer as the influences become more complex and intermixed: the artist now borrows not only from the traditional cultures that populated the island, but also appropriates from contemporary everyday life. The exhibition includes works by leading artists in a variety of media, from paintings, works on paper and photography to mixed-media sculpture and installations.

Curators: Gail Gelburd, Ph. D. Guest Curator, Zette Emmons, Project Director
Location: Brady and Eweson Galleries

NEWARK MUSEUM
49 Washington Street
in the Downtown / Arts District of Newark
Newark, New Jersey

www.newarkmuseum.org