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Previously Unpublished Photos Capture Life in Cuba Before Revolution

The Cuban revolution did not happen all at once. In the first half of the 20th century, even as Cuba maintained a reputation as a tourist haven and a haunt for Ernest Hemingway, the island’s politics were almost continually unsettled.
After Fidel Castro’s 1953 uprising against the dictator Fulgencio Batista failed, his followers waited for him to try again. By the end of the decade, Castro had done so — this time succeeding. But by early 1959, shortly after he first rose to power, it was clear that his revolution would not be a gentle one. As his government moved toward hardline communism, many fled Cuba.
One of those many was a young boy, just 8 years old, named Ramiro A. Fernández. Fernández, who was born in Havana, moved to the U.S. and stayed there. Years later, he would work in photo departments at Time Inc. for more than two decades, during which time he began to build a collection of images from his homeland. His collection of Cuban photos and ephemera — which today tops out at more than 8,000 individual items — includes rarities from Cuban history dating back to the early days of photography.
A selection of those images were previously published in the book Cuba Then, a revised and expanded edition of which will be released on May 29, as a response to evolutions of Cuba's place in the world, particularly vis-à-vis the United States, since the first edition came out. (In 1960, the U.S. imposed an embargo that kept most U.S. goods out of Cuba, and two years later that policy expanded. During that period, the U.S. closed its embassy in Havana; diplomatic relations resumed in 2015 but tensions remain.) http://time.com/5286347/photos-of-cuba-before-revolution/

7 Sites in Havana That Tell the Story of Cuba’s Rich Architectural History

Havana is often referred to as a time machine that transports visitors to a particular moment in history, seemingly frozen in time. While it is a city that boasts an exhaustive timeline of imported styles, Havana in the present day is not defined by a singular historical era—either in its political climate or in its architectural zeitgeist.

https://www.archdaily.com/894093/7-sites-in-havana-that-tell-the-story-of-cubas-rich-architectural-history

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Speaking about different types of photography in Cuba, here you can see different documentary works of cuban photographers, they are not really focused on architecture, is more about human stories, also is a good way to know Cuba.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/alfredosarabia/
http://photographingcuba.com/photo-cuban-essays-by-louis-alarcon

Directory of cuban photographers
http://www.quinquecuba.com/directorio-fotografos/

also Alberto Korda, the cuban photographer who took the famous picture of che guevara
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberto_Korda

I hope I have contributed something to this forum, I love cuban photography, is a country really alive, fantastic !
Best regards.

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