THE
CUBANS
Jack Beckham Combs
Hardbound,
9½" x 12", 192
pages
160 color illustrations
2010, University Press of Virginia
Foreword by Jennifer L. McCoy
Essay by Julia E. Sweig
From the Publisher:
Asked to conjure an image of Cuba, most
Americans see a country of elegant, crumbling buildings and old
American cars. While it takes less than twenty-five minutes to
fly from Miami to Havana, the United States and its island neighbor
have been mired in hostility and distrust since the Castro Revolution
ousted the American-backed puppet Batista fifty years ago. Shared
family connections have allowed both Americans and Cubans to separate
the governments of each country from its people, but there is
still misunderstanding on both sides.
Photographs that purport to represent Cuba and
its people often reproduce the narrow American imagination of
the place, starting and ending in Old Habana. While it is true
that the buildings in this small section of the city, many of
which are 300 years old, have been crumbling for 150 years, and
many of the cars are from the pre-Revolution era, this quaint
image bears little reality to the country and its people.
The documentary photographer Jack Combs has been
making photographs of the Cuban people over the course of six
years and fifteen visits to the island. His images range from
the urban to the rural, from saturated colors and polished night
skies to vibrant street scenes full of movement and sere agricultural
landscapes. Much of Combs’s time was spent outside Havana,
traveling to cities, smaller towns, villages, and farms in every
Cuban province. His pictures of agricultural life are beautiful
pastoral compositions. Rarer still is the emphasis his eye places
on ordinary people living their everyday lives. Their faces and
settings demonstrate that Cubans may have less than they need,
but they are nonetheless a people of strength, good humor, and
great national pride. The breakup of the Soviet Union and the
end of its massive economic subsidies may have shattered the Cuban
leaders’ dream of economic independence, but not the people’s
spirit. |