Publisher's Description
Photographer David Bailey has said, self-deprecatingly, that Havana “is just a
superficial look, not a soul searching investigation, a quick impression of a
place that is unique in it’s geographical position.” But he reveals the importance
of that quick impression and the depth of his understanding when he
describes Havana’s “unique position”—with surreal accuracy—as “much closer
to the United States of America than the space station is. Both are places ordinary
Americans cannot visit. To be one of the poorest nations on Earth, almost
within spitting distance of the richest makes the poverty of Cuba seem more
extreme. Two countries with extreme ideologies; the small one proving that
Communism does not work, the other proving that democratic paranoia does
work if the power and the money are in place.” Havana makes use of Bailey’s
mastery of the full range of the medium’s many genres, from vibrant street
reportage to crystalline portraiture. This is Havana as an icon of one of the
most distinct and revealing cultural divides left in a world hurtling towards
homogeneity, Havana as seen by a master at the height of his craft. Bound in
an embossed leather cover.
Book Information
ISBN:
3865212700
Publisher:
Steidl
Format:
Hardcover, 176 pages
Language:
English
Dimensions:
10,2 x
13 x
0,8 inches