Faded Elegance: Portraits of Havana opens Fenimore Art Museum’s new season with a series of photographs that turn Havana’s interiors and streets into a study of color, weathering and memory. On view through December 31, the exhibition gathers nearly one hundred images by
Michael Eastman, whose long interest in city facades and interior spaces finds one of its most atmospheric subjects in Cuba’s capital.
Eastman, a self-taught photographer, has spent decades working in cities including Paris, Rome, New Orleans and Havana. His images are known for their large scale, precise framing and strong color, but what gives them their character is the way they hold surface and decay together. In this Havana series, that means faded paint, cracked walls, old furniture, ornate chandeliers and empty rooms that still seem occupied by history. People are mostly absent, but their presence is felt in the details they leave behind.
The exhibition draws from work made over the past two decades and shows Eastman’s habit of treating architecture almost like portraiture. The rooms and streets do not simply serve as backdrops. They carry the weight of changing uses, social memory and time itself. Havana appears here as a city where grandeur and wear sit side by side, and where the visual evidence of daily life remains in objects, textures and light.
Eastman’s photographs have appeared in major magazines and are held in collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the International Center of Photography, the Art Institute of Chicago and LACMA. That institutional presence reflects the reach of a practice that has consistently focused on architecture, interiors and the poetry of decline.
Set in Cooperstown on the shores of Otsego Lake, Fenimore Art Museum uses this exhibition to begin the season with a city far from upstate New York but close in spirit to the museum’s interest in strong visual histories. In Eastman’s Havana, the past does not disappear. It stays visible in the light.
Image:
Red Couch, Havana, 2010 Digital C-Print Collection of Michael Eastman / Courtesy of Holden Luntz Gallery