Cuban Studies

Ada Ferrer | Visionary Aponte: History, Art, and Black Freedom

José Antonio Aponte was a free black man in nineteenth-century Havana. He was also a visual artist and a revolutionary. In fact, he used his art as a way to think about and plot revolution. In 1812, authorities hanged him for his leadership of a failed antislavery rebellion, and sometime after that his major work of art—a “book of paintings” with 63 images disappeared.

bronze bas-relief monument to Jose Aponte; the image is of an Afro-Cuban man striking the chains off two other enslaved men