Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 74

He Who Doesn’t Have Some Congo Has Some Carabalí: Blackness and Blacks as the Image of a Race in Cuban Art’s Discourse of Identity José Clemente Gascón Martínez Master of Science, plastic artist and art critic Havana, Cuba The fatherland is everyone’s fate, and everyone’s pain, and a firmament for all, and no one’s domain or chaplaincy. José Martí T black slave is in the foreground, with his masters, and was the one who explained to his owner the medicinal properties of his property’s springs (Ribeaux 1998:2). From these initial works, the images appearing in Federico Mialhe’s engravings are almost exclusively of blacks; the most illustrative one appears in the lithograph “El Día de Reyes” [Three Kings Day], which displays the cultural figure’s typical costume. Regardless the intention with which it was created, the nineteenth century is chock full of images of black people. (Figures 1a, 1, 1c) he image of blacks as the image of a race has been manipulated in every way possible in Cuba’s plastic arts. Most commonly, it has been exploited from a religious, folkloric point of view, and has joined concepts of race and identity in order to sieve or elude a point which few dare to examine, given its delicate treatment. If this were not so, the political connotations could lead to an examination of this point of view. Nicolás Escalera (1734-1804) is responsible for the first appearance of a black person in Cuban painting. His was the first example of a representation of a Cuban-born black at a time when the island was under colonial rule and the scourge of slavery in full swing. Escalera receives as payment for his services what today would amount to a birth certificate that “removed any blemish from his blood” and guaranteed he belongs to the white race. If his value as an artist resides in having pioneered the subject of blacks in Cuban art, in reality the black figure in question can be found in one of the pendants in a crossbeam at the Santa María del Rosario Church, a “country cathedral” conFig. 1a. Federico Mialhe (XIXth century). structed between 1760 and 1766. It is a recreaEl día de Reyes [The Epiphany]. Engraving. Lithograph tion of the Casa Bayona legend, in which the 74