To our collector, interior designer and eBay friends worldwide:
The Cuban Poster Gallery in Washington D.C. is offering a huge selection of handmade Cuban silk-screen movie posters, many of which work beautifully well together. To view all of the posters, please visit our eBay Store, where new listings are being posted every week in both the Auction and Buy It Now/Best Offer formats. Visit us at stores.ebay.com/CubanPosterGallery
The Cuban Poster Gallery appreciates your business!
Our regular price for this poster is $229.
Here we are offering a scarce and original 1st Edition Cuban silk-screen poster honoring MEMORIAS DE SUBDESARROLLO (Memories of Underdevelopment), an award-winning 1968 Cuban film directed by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea. This rarely seen tribute poster was designed in 2009 by Arnulfo Espinosa, a member of the new generation of Cuban graphic artists that has been widely acclaimed. Espinosa is a well-respected Havana artist who has served as art director of UNESCO's Cultural and Development journal. See below for a brief summary of the film, which can easily be found on DVD in Spanish and with English and French subtitles.
This poster was designed for a competition, sponsored by the Cuban Film Institute, that challenged Cuban designers in 2009 to make a poster for any classic film. The competition resulted in some outstanding silk-screened posters (all made in very small numbers; believed to be 100 or fewer copies!) for films that also included Cabaret, Silence of the Lambs Rebel Without A Cause, Clockwork Orange and Persona (the Igmar Bergman classic). The Cuban Poster Gallery's eBay Store has acquired a few copies of these rarely seen posters; we invite you add them to your collection before they are gone.
A copy of this poster by Arnulfo Espinosa was selected to appear in the prestigious 2018 poster art retrospective at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (National Fine Arts Museum) in Havana.
This MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT poster (measuring 20 by 30 inches, which is a standard size, so easy and inexpensive to frame) was silk-screened in the Cuban Film Institute's workshop in Havana in 2009. Condition of this poster is good; please note that with many Cuban posters, including this one, you might find some slight ripples or wrinkles in the white border around the images and small imperfections elsewhere because these posters are, after all, handmade. Buy with 100 percent confidence; posters purchased from the Cuban Poster Gallery on eBay can be returned for any reason within 30 days.
Your original "MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT" tribute poster will be shipped to U.S. addresses by USPS Ground Advantage or UPS (with delivery confirmation) in a sturdy tube. For international buyers (outside of the United States), eBay will calculate the cost of shipping and any required Customs duties and taxes.
Brief summary of MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT: Sergio, a wealthy bourgeois aspiring writer, decides to stay in Cuba even though his wife and friends flee to Miami. Sergio looks back over the changes in Cuba, from the Cuban revolution to the missle crisis, the effect of living in an underdeveloped country, and his relations with his girlfriends Elena and Hanna. Memories of Underdevelopment is a complex character study of alienation during the turmoil of social changes. The film is told in a highly subjective point of view through a fragmented narrative that resembles the way memories function.Throughout the film, Sergio narrates action, and at times is used as a tool to present bits of political information about the climate in Cuba at the time. In several instances, real-life documentary footage of protests and political events are incorporated into the film and played over Sergio’s narration to expose the audience to the reality of the revolution. SOURCE: Wikipedia
TITLE: MEMORIAS DE SUBDESARROLLO (Memories of Underdevelopment), designed to salute an award-winning 1968 Cuban film
DESIGNER: Arnulfo Espinosa
YEAR: 2009
MEDIUM: Silk-screen / Serigraph
SIZE: 20 x 30 inches; 51 x 76 cm
ORIGIN: the ICAIC (Cuban Film Institute) silk-screen workshop in Havana, Cuba
A few words about collecting Cuba's silk-screen movie posters:
For more than 60 years, the Cuban Film Institute has been designing silk-screened posters for most every movie shown on the island, whether the films originated in Cuba, the United States, Brazil, Japan or Italy. In the midst of the Cold War 1960s and 1970s, many of the subtitled foreign films shown in Cuba came from the island nation's communist allies in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Vietnam and even North Korea.
Unlike in the United States, where movie posters are often dominated by images of Hollywood stars, the Cubans assign a graphic artist to design an original piece of artwork for each film. These posters are widely recognized in graphic design circles as stylish works of art, handmade one color at a time and often under difficult circumstances (at various times, paint and even paper have been in short supply on the island.)
Cuba's silk-screen movie posters are nothing less than museum pieces. Examples of Cuban poster art can be found in the permanent collections of museums across the globe from the Victoria & Albert in London to the Museum of Modern Art in New York, as well as in prestigious institutions such as the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles.
Adding to their collectability, Cuba's movie posters are produced in relatively small numbers. Typically, a few hundred copies are made for each film, although the runs have been as low as 50. Responding to demand from collectors, the Cuban Film Institute has re-screened some of its more popular posters. That's why some posters created in the 1960s and 1970s began reappearing on the Caribbean island in the 1990s and 2000s.
Further adding to their collectability, many of Cuba's vintage posters are imperiled. Although a few hundred copies may have been screened originally, relatively few have survived, due to the island's wet and humid climate, inadequate storage facilities in Havana and improper handling in Cuba and elsewhere. To us, these survivors are rare beauties, even those with obvious flaws. We are proud to have rescued hundreds of posters from almost certain extinction by storing them in an air conditioned, acid-free environment.
We at the Cuban Poster Gallery offer both 1st and 2nd Edition posters to our customers on eBay and in our Washington D.C. gallery. We consider both to be collectible, and (in response to a question we often get) all of these posters were legally imported because the U.S. government exempts artwork from its economic embargo against Cuba. While the pricier originals are favored by some collectors, the re-screens are also collectible because they were made in the same Havana workshop as the originals. Note that we never sell unauthorized reproductions that have been cranked out in print shops in the U.S. and Europe.
To our eBay customers, we pledge to accurately describe the posters we list and price them fairly based on condition and scarcity. Have a question? Please don't hesitate to contact us.
To view more distinctive Cuban graphics, we invite you to visit the Cuban Poster Gallery's eBay Store: http://stores.ebay.com/cubanpostergallery