Citizen in Downtown Havana, Cuba

Citizen in Downtown Havana, Cuba

Walker EvansWW-1932-103129
1932·Gelatin silver print·Image/paper: 22.2 × 11.7 cm (8 3/4 × 4 5/8 in.); Mount: 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14 1/16 in.)

<p>Walker Evans is perhaps best known for his dispassionate photographs of the American South during the Depression. It was during a 1933 assignment in Havana, Cuba, however, that he truly honed his eye as a social documentarian. Evans was hired by Carlton Beals to illustrate his book <em>The Crime of Cuba</em>, a polemical work that criticized American capitalists for their contribution to the island’s economic and political collapse. In the three weeks Evans spent in Havana, he was dismayed by the cultural crisis and police repression but visually delighted by the urban crowds, street grids, advertisements, and cinema posters. “It’s still a frontier town, and half savage, forgetful and unsafe,” he noted. “I have been drunk with this new city for days.” This photograph of a Cuban man—nonchalantly dapper in a white suit and skimmer hat, calling to mind the “dandy” figure praised by nineteenth-century critic and poet Charles Baudelaire—suggests Havana streets that were overwhelmingly male but racially diverse. Although omitted from Beals’s book, this image became one of Evans’s favorites, and he featured it in his landmark 1938 Museum of Modern Art exhibition and book, <em>American Photographs</em>.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1932
Dimensions
Image/paper: 22.2 × 11.7 cm (8 3/4 × 4 5/8 in.); Mount: 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14 1/16 in.)

Artist

Walker Evans
Walker Evans

Photography

Walker Evans (1903-1975) was an American photographer and photojournalist, best known for his work documenting the effects of the Great Depression through his precise, candid portrayals of everyday life. His most famous project, conducted for the Farm Security Administration (FSA), captured the faces and living conditions of struggling farmers and their families, providing an indelible record of the era. Evans's style, characterized by its clarity, detail, and lack of embellishment, influenced generations of photographers and artists. His work goes beyond mere documentation to reveal the beauty in the ordinary, making him a pivotal figure in the history of photography. Evans's photographs have been exhibited globally and remain influential in both art and social documentary contexts.

New Haven, CT, USA

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1932
Dimensions
Image/paper: 22.2 × 11.7 cm (8 3/4 × 4 5/8 in.); Mount: 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14 1/16 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1932-103129

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Walker Evans

Walker Evans

Photography

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