Who is聽he?
Wifredo Lam was a Cuban-born artist, best known for his large scale paintings which reference modernist aesthetics and Afro-Cuban imagery to explore themes of social injustice, spirituality and聽rebirth.
Born in the small town of Sagua la Grande at the turn of the century, his father was a Chinese immigrant and his mother a descendent of both Spanish conquistadors and African slaves. Lam鈥檚 distinctive style and exploration of Afro-Cuban visual culture, alongside his knowledge of European modernism, made a huge impact on the art world. Through his work, Lam was able to challenge assumptions about non-European art and examine the effects of colonialism.聽聽
Having pursued a successful career within avant-garde circles on both sides of the Atlantic, he can be considered one of the most important artists to come out of the twentieth聽century.
![Image of Wifredo Lam's Self-Portrait from 1926](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/4d-26.01autoportraitweb.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam Self-Portrait 1926 Private collection, Paris 漏 SDO Wifredo聽Lam
How did he start his聽career?
In 1916 Lam moved to Havana, initially to pursue a career in law and later studying art at Havana鈥檚 School of Fine Arts. He quickly began to exhibit in annual salons and establish himself as a young artist, specialising in a traditional realist style and mostly painting landscapes and still聽lifes.
Showing signs of artistic promise, Lam received a scholarship to study at the Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando in Madrid. There he became part of a vibrant cultural circle, training under the portraitist Fernando 脕lvarez de Sotomayor. During this time, Lam became greatly motivated by his trips to the Prado Museum, where he encountered the works of Diego Vel谩zquez, Hieronymus Bosch and Francisco de Goya. Inspired by Goya鈥檚 studies of political corruption, Lam went on to use his own work as a way of condemning the horrors of聽war.
![Image of Wifredo Lam's painting Hanging Houses, III from 1927](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/8casas-colgadas-iii-web.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam Hanging Houses, III 1927 The Rudman Trust 漏 SDO Wifredo聽Lam
What are the common themes within his early聽work?
In 1931, after only two years of marriage, Lam lost both his first wife and infant son to tuberculosis. Overwhelmed by this personal tragedy, he later stated 鈥榤y grief deprived me of all enthusiasm for life鈥. This sorrow is reflected in some of Lam鈥檚 early聽work.聽
In 1936, Lam fought for the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War. The turmoil of this experience聽also became a frequent theme within his paintings, which concentrated on dynamic groupings of聽figures.
Who was he influenced聽by?
Lam relocated to Paris in 1938. While there he befriended Pablo Picasso, who introduced Lam to leading artists, including Andr茅 Breton, Joan Mir贸 and 脫scar Dom铆nguez, and writers such as Benjamin P茅ret and Pierre Mabille. During this time Lam鈥檚 work moved towards a modernist style, as he began to experiment with cubist techniques and showed an interest in the surrealists鈥 exploration of the subconscious and聽automatism.
While Lam became an active member of the surrealist movement, he also stated that 鈥榮urrealism gave me an opening, but I haven鈥檛 painted in a surrealist manner鈥. For this reason Lam has become difficult to define as an聽artist.聽
![Image of Wifredo Lam's painting Untitled 1939](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/39.49sanstitrep.59.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam Untitled 1939 Private collection (The Rudman Trust) 漏 SDO Wifredo聽Lam
![Image of Wifredo Lam's painting Young Woman on a Light Green Background from 1938](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/2938.24jeunefemmeweb.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam Young Woman on a Light Green Background 1938 Private collection, Paris 漏 SDO Wifredo聽Lam
How did Cuba impact his聽work?
After eighteen years away, Lam returned to Havana in 1941 as part of the exodus of refugees fleeing the German occupation. Upon his return after years in Europe, he was dismayed to still see racial inequality and political corruption in his home country. As such, Lam used art to explore Cuban culture and聽identity.聽
Lam increasingly made reference to Cuba within his work, stating 鈥業 wanted with all my heart to paint the drama of my country鈥. Rediscovering the natural landscape, he often depicted Cuba鈥檚 vegetation and used an earthy colour palette as well as vibrant greens, reds and oranges of the Caribbean isles. Lam continued to develop this signature style, incorporating elements of Afro-Cuban聽imagery.聽
At this time, Lam also became fascinated with the Santer铆a religion, in which rituals and beliefs from West Africa are overlaid with aspects of Catholicism. During both Santer铆a and Vodou rituals, the latter of which he encountered on an extended visit to Haiti, the worshipper is allegedly possessed or 鈥榬idden鈥 by a spirit. The influence of these ceremonies is evident within Lam鈥檚 work, which commonly depict mask-like faces and hybrid figures including the 鈥榟orse-headed woman鈥. These figures can be interpreted as poetic references to the sex workers present in pre-Revolutionary Cuba, as Lam commented on his homeland鈥檚 poverty and corruption.聽聽
Impressed by the social ideals of the Cuban revolution, Lam returned to Cuba periodically.聽His final visits to Havana were for medical treatment following a stroke in聽1978.
![Photograph of Wifredo Lam filming during a tour of Cuba](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/lamfilmingduringthegroupstourofthecountry-copi.width-340.jpg)
漏 Archives SDO Wifredo聽Lam
What are his key聽works?
![Image of Wifredo Lam's painting Self-Portrait, II 1938](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/363-newl38.01autoportrait-web.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam聽Self-Portrait, II 1938聽漏聽The Rudman聽Trust
Self-Portrait II听1938
Lam made only a small number of self-portraits throughout his career. This self-portrait from 1938 signifies his bohemian status as an artist. Shown in the colourful interior of his studio, Lam holds himself purposefully, yet he avoids direct eye-contact with the viewer. He would later go on to present himself in a much more abstract style.聽聽
![Image of Wifredo Lam's painting The Jungle 1943](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/76lajungegrandformat-web.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam The Jungle 1943 Museum of Modern Art, New York 漏 SDO The Estate of Wifredo聽Lam
The Jungle听1943
Completed in 1943, The Jungle is considered Lam鈥檚 breakthrough piece of art. The large scale painting depicts hybrid male and female figures within a crowded Cuban jungle, their bodies merging between human, animal and plant. The faces appear mask-like, while their breasts, buttocks and genitalia are exaggerated and eroticised. The artist explained that 鈥榠n The Jungle and in other works I have tried to relocate Black cultural objects in terms of their own landscape and in relation to their own world鈥. Unfortunately, as the work was painted onto large pieces of kraft paper, it is too fragile to聽travel.
![Wifredo Lam The Eternal Present (An Homage to Alejandro Garc铆a Caturla) 1944 Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design (Providence, USA) 漏 SDO Wifredo Lam](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/risdm-66-154.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam The Eternal Present (An Homage to Alejandro Garc铆a Caturla) 1944 Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design (Providence, USA) 漏 SDO Wifredo聽Lam
The Eternal Present (Homage to Alejandro Garc铆a Caturla)听1944听
Lam considered this work a direct comment on his home country and its corruptions. He later explained that the woman on the left represented 鈥榯he paradise that foreigners seek in Cuba, a land of pleasures and sickly-sweet music鈥. Others have interpreted the figure as Oshun, the Orisha of love, depicted alongside warrior deities Elegua and Ogun, the Orisha of war. Together they come to represent resistance to the corruption of Cuba by imperialist聽powers.聽
Alejandro Garc铆a Caturla was a Cuban composer and judge, who was murdered in 1940 by the defendant in a trial he was to oversee that same聽afternoon.
![Image of Wifredo Lam's Horse-Headed Woman painting from 1950](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/w-lam-mujer-caballo-interpolada-cmyktwret2web.width-340.jpg)
Wifredo Lam Horse-Headed Woman聽1950, The Rudman Trust 聽漏 SDO Estate of Wifredo Lam / Photo: Joaqu铆n Cort茅s y Joaqu铆n Lores, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sof铆a,聽Madrid聽
Horse-Headed Woman听1950听
In 1950, Lam was visited by Art News journalist Geri Trotta and photographer Mark Shaw. Together they documented Lam creating this work, gaining a unique insight into the artist鈥檚 practice and home life. Unpublished photographs show that Lam鈥檚 initial design for the painting was on a scrap of paper. The artist then applied multiple washes of paint, thinned with turpentine, onto a canvas. The article suggests that Lam found this a torturous process, stating 鈥榓ll art is tragedy鈥or me, painting is a聽torment鈥.聽
What the critics said聽鈥
Lam is one of the most fascinating figures in the history of modern painting.
Alastair Sooke, Art critic聽
Lam has an Oriental facility for design. He composes as naturally as he breathes.
Gerri Trotta, Art critic, 1950
We can appreciate how these symbols 鈥 are arranged together with such rhythmic skill and clarity, that their rational organisation almost exorcises their terror.
John Berger, Art critic聽
His art is the last tarot of surrealism and a tropical wonder of modern painting.
Jonathan Jones, Art critic
Wifredo Lam in quotes聽鈥
![Photography of Wifredo Lam in his studio in Havana](https://media.tate.org.uk/aztate-prd-ew-dg-wgtail-st1-ctr-data/images/markshawwifredolamhavana1950cmarkshawmptvimage.width-340_Yd7dLcH.jpg)
Mark Shaw Wifredo Lam, Havana聽1950 漏 Mark Shaw聽mptvimages.com
- 鈥楢s I work, I do everything聽intuitively鈥.
- 鈥榃hen I arrived in Paris, after the fall of the Spanish Republic to the fascists, I began to paint what I felt most deeply [鈥 this strange world started to flow out of聽me鈥.
- 鈥楢frica has not only been dispossessed of many of its people, but also of its historical consciousness 鈥 I have tried to relocate Black cultural objects in terms of their own landscape and in relation to their own聽world鈥.
- 鈥楳y painting is an act of decolonization not in a physical sense, but in a mental聽one鈥.
痴颈蝉颈迟听The EY Exhibition: Wifredo Lam at 色控传媒,聽14 September 2016 鈥 8 January聽2017.