Cuba, Between the Lines
A reflection on beauty, scarcity, and the quiet truths behind the lens
“We floated in a gentle buzz for weeks after returning from Cuba. It’s rare for a place to leave such an imprint. Surely, it wasn’t just the rum and cigars—it was something deeper, something that lingered in the soul.”
I’ve been unraveling the threads of our time in Cuba—an experience at once stirring and elusive, beautiful and bewildering. I’ve been sifting through our time in Cuba—revisiting photographs, replaying moments, and searching for language that could do justice to an experience both luminous and difficult to name.
Cuba was—undeniably—beautiful. Arrestingly so. A country awash in saturated color and brimming with artistic soul, where every street corner feels like a stage, every wall a canvas. The textures, the music, the light—everything pulses with a kind of unfiltered vitality. It’s a place that seizes the senses and doesn’t let go.
The island holds a rare, magnetic charm: a place where history hums through crumbling facades and music spills from open doorways like an eternal heartbeat. It is no exaggeration to say that my camera was overwhelmed—capturing breathtaking murals, aged colonial architecture draped in Caribbean light, street performances charged with soul, and spontaneous symphonies erupting from alleyways. The artistry of Cuba is omnipresent, stitched into the fabric of its daily life with unmistakable passion and grit. As you scroll through these images, I hope they offer a glimpse of the magic I witnessed: Cuba, in all its fierce color and character—so iconic, so passionate, so real.
And yet, even as I share these moments, I carry with me a certain guilt. A hesitation. Because what I’ve captured is the red-carpet version of Cuba—It’s the tourist’s lens, polished and privileged, not the unfiltered truth of the everyday Cuban. It is not the full story.
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