Wifredo Lam is the first major monograph on the Cuban artist since 1989, offering a comprehensive retrospective of his life, work, and legacy. Published by Thames & Hudson in celebration of Wifredo Lam’s legacy, the book draws on recent biographical research and cataloging to deepen our understanding of his contributions to twentieth-century art and politics..
Born in 1902 to a Chinese father and an African mother, Lam’s work reflects a unique synthesis of European and Afro-Caribbean visual culture. His artistic journey began in Spain, where he studied Bosch, Dürer, Velázquez, and Goya, and evolved through encounters with Picasso and Andre Breton in Paris. Influenced by Surrealism, Matisse, and African art, Lam developed a symbolic and pictorial language that challenged colonial narratives and embraced spiritual hybridity.
Forced to flee Nazi-occupied Paris in 1940, Lam returned to Cuba, where his style matured into a powerful tool for confronting social injustice and expressing cultural resistance. This monograph, authored by Jacques Leenhardt, art critic and director of social sciences at the École des Hautes Études, offers thoughtful interpretations of Lam’s oeuvre, situating him alongside Picasso and Max Ernst as a central figure of modernity.
With over 300 color illustrations and archival insights, this volume is essential for collectors, scholars, and readers interested in global modernism, postcolonial aesthetics, and the intersections of art and identity.











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