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Wifredo Lam: When I Don't Sleep, I Dream

Wifredo Lam, Aimé Césaire, Oscar Domínguez, Ugo Mulas, Benjamin Péret, Victor Brauner

Nov 10 – Apr 11

The Museum of Modern Art
Museum

The Museum of Modern Art

11 W 53rd St, New York, NY 10019

Tue-Sun 10:30am-5:30pm, Thu until 8pm

Admission

🎁

Free Admission

Free with Museum admission

About

Wifredo Lam's paintings expanded the horizons of modernism by creating a meaningful space for the beauty and depth of Black diasporic culture. Born in Cuba at the start of the 20th century, Lam forged his political convictions and commitment to modern painting in war-torn Europe in the 1930s. His exile and return to the Caribbean after 18 years abroad drove him to radically reimagine his artistic project through Afro-Caribbean histories. For Lam, who was of African and Chinese descent, crafting his vivid new imaginary was more than a means of self-reflection. He famously declared that his art was an "act of decolonization." His formal experiments, his transforming figures and landscapes, and his affinity for poetry and collaboration allowed him to disrupt and overcome the colonial structures he encountered in art and in life. "I knew I was running the risk of not being understood either by the man in the street or by the others," Lam said, "but a true picture has the power to set the imagination to work, even if it takes time." Wifredo Lam: When I Don't Sleep, I Dream is the first retrospective in the United States to feature the full trajectory of Lam's remarkable vision, inviting us to see the world anew.

Tags

paintingretrospectivecontemporarymodernismsurrealismCuban artAfrican diasporaCaribbean culturedecolonizationsolo exhibition
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