🇨🇺120 years ago today, Cuban painter #WifredoLam (1902-1982) was born. His Cantonese father did calligraphy, inspired by Confucian/Daoist traditions, mother was a Congolese descendant, and godmother, an Afro-Cuban priestess. You can say he was made in and of the Third World.🧵1/7
Over his 80 years, #WifredoLam was conscientised by the Spanish Civil War, anti-colonial struggles, Negritude, Surrealism, and the Cuban Revolution. He drew, painted, sculpted, illustrated, engraved, and gave expression to aspirations of colonised peoples. 2/7
In Europe, #WifredoLam befriended Surrealist André Breton, Communist painter Pablo Picasso, and Caribbean anti-colonial thinkers, later visiting Aimé Césaire in Martinique. In a growing anti-colonial and black consciousness, Lam turned towards his African roots in his art. 3/7
#WifredoLam’s work sought to displace the authority of European modernism and aesthetics on the colonised world. In ‘The Jungle’ (1943), a pair of scissors is held high, so as to cut away at Cuba's colonial past to give way to new shoots being born from their roots. 4/7
#WifredoLam looked to the past to pave a future for Cuba: ‘I wanted with all my heart to paint the drama of my country. In this way I could act as a Trojan horse that would spew forth hallucinating figures with the power to surprise, to disturb the dreams of the exploiters.’ 5/7
After the Cuban Revolution, #WifredoLam returned to Cuba. He painted “El Tercer Mundo” (The Third World) (1965) for the Presidential Palace, an homage to Fidel Castro and the revolutionary struggle. 6/7
‘With regard to life, modern painting is a revolutionary activity…We need it in order to transform the world into a more humane place where humankind can live in liberty…We must accept these things with passion. It means that we must live imaginatively.’
—#WifredoLam 7/7
For anyone interested, check out the colloquium organized by @CACWifredoLam in homage #WifredoLam on the 120th anniversary of his birth (in Spanish):
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<A thread for #25November> Today is a day of revolutionary martyrs. Our chosen ancestors.
25 November, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence, marks the day in 1960 that the Mirabal sisters were assassinated in the fight to see the Dominican Republic liberated.
25 November, the day in 1994 that the Koothuparambu communist student activists were gunned down in Kerala, India.
25 November, the day that our comandante Fidel left us four years ago — defying the hundreds of attempts by Empire on his life, during his life.
<A thread to remember a feminist ancestor>
Born 4 September 1895, #XiangJingyu was a Chinese communist, politicised by the anti-feudalism of the 1911 Revolution and the anti-imperialism of May Fourth Movement.
Part of the Communist Party of China since its founding, Xiang Jingyu became the first woman elected into the central committee and headed the Women’s Bureau.
Xiang Jingyu helped build the first national women’s movement, mobilising strikes of thousands of women workers in silk and cigaratte factories, and women’s support of the great 1925 Canton-Hong Kong strike.