ES / EN
- July 6, 2026 -
No Result
View All Result
OnCubaNews
  • World
  • Cuba
  • Cuba-USA
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Infographic
  • Culture
    • Billboard
  • Sports
  • Styles / Trends
  • Media
  • Special
  • Cuban Flavors
  • World
  • Cuba
  • Cuba-USA
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Infographic
  • Culture
    • Billboard
  • Sports
  • Styles / Trends
  • Media
  • Special
  • Cuban Flavors
OnCubaNews
ES / EN

Mabel Poblet: First the Idea, Later the Technology

by
  • Redacción OnCuba
    Redacción OnCuba
February 28, 2018
in Uncategorized
0
Photo by Jorge Luis Borges

Photo by Jorge Luis Borges

 

When Mabel Poblet was barely a child and walked through the streets of her native Cienfuegos, she dreamed about being a ballerina, but she lacked the necessary physical aptitudes: her mother, an architect, and her father, a renowned children’s theater company director, encouraged her to find herself. She started weighing her options in a school in the locality which did not give courses on engraving, the specialty she was interested in. That’s why she arrived in Havana when she was just 16 years old and was able to enroll in San Alejandro, the prestigious arts academy from which she graduated in 2007. Definitively in the capital, Mabel discovered her “way of communicating” and her “life’s passion”: visual arts.

Considered one of the most outstanding emerging artists in the Cuban contemporary context, she forms part of the 2000 generation with an aesthetics that is her very own. Her themes have to do with the family, love, friendship, intercontinental relations: “everything that is part of life flows in my work,” she says in an exclusive interview for OnCuba.

———————-

The year 2017 was one of great creative intensity for Mabel Poblet and for the materialization of dreams: she participated in the Cuba Pavilion in the Venice Biennial, “something I always yearned for and I feel greatly honored to have been chosen. I took to Venice an installation titled Escala de valores [Scale of Values]. It was truly impressive.”

With more than 50 personal and collective exhibitions in the United States, Portugal, Russia, South Korea, United Kingdom, Colombia, Ecuador and Spain, among other countries, Poblet recognizes that having studied in San Alejandro (2007) and having graduated from the Higher Institute of Art (2012), gave her the necessary tools to break away from the academy and open her own creative path. She affirms that the fact that the teachers are, at the same time, independent artists favors the dialogue and the expansion of views, while she recognizes her admiration for the work of Sandra Ramos and also recalls William Pérez, who involved her “in kinetic art.”

Related Posts

Photo: Ernesto Mastrascusa/EFE.

The Announced Measures and What Is Still Missing

June 19, 2026

Cuba Needs a National Pact

June 6, 2026
An inclusive cafe in Havana employs young people

An inclusive cafe in Havana employs young people with Down’s syndrome and autism amid Cuba’s crisis

May 21, 2026
Cuban entrepreneurship

U.S. oil siege of Cuba weighs down private sector Washington seeks to aid

May 5, 2026

Another of the fundamental and decisive influences for the young artist was exchanging experiences with Julio le Parc in his workshop in Paris: “being close to the maestro gave my life a radical turn because getting to know a person with so much wisdom, so sweet, with so much love and with so much passion for his work, made me feel fortunate about my own work, about the career I chose and, above all, to realize how much can reach the entire world from a small workshop. That certainty is overwhelming.” And she immediately recognizes that such an influence can be perceived in the series Patria (Homeland) in which she plays with movement, light, kinetics and, although they are static works, they can be catalogued as optic kinetic art.

Although Mabel Poblet doesn’t make a pure engraving, she does use it for work. It was the specialty that opened for her a field of expression for everything carried out until now: “I was interested in engraving, not to make multiple works but rather to make unique works based on the multiplicity of one same element; that is why there is a series of small fragments in most of my works which make up a greater image. I believe that way of doing comes from my formation as an engraver.”

The self-referential was evident in the beginnings, especially in her first series titled Lugar de origen (Place of Origin) based on photos of her family and of spots in Cienfuegos. Subsequently, in Abacos (Abacuses) the creator focuses on memory and on how we create a host of information throughout life: “I started getting to know more persons and stumbling upon social and political events that started affecting my daily life. All those experiences start settling and form part of creation; that is why I believe I have distanced myself a bit from self- referentiality, to speak of more global themes based on human interrelations.”

The human body has also been a support, a territory explored by Mabel based on the criterion that all human beings have common experiences, even if they have different lives: “we all see someone born, someone die; we move from a city, return to it and leave, we meet someone, we say goodbye, we meet again. In my work – after I left behind the self-referential – I started working with my own body, but to speak of other persons’ experiences. One of those examples is the work Simplemente bella [Simply Beautiful] in which I collaborated with a group of women inmates in the prisons of Holguín, in eastern Cuba. Until now Simplemente bella and Ana are two decisive pieces in my career.”

Mabel Poblet’s work is a constant, contemporary dialogue that is not indulgent at all with Cuban reality and also with matters of a planetary character, for example migrations. Her installations and sculptural objects are backed, first, on the idea and later on the technology. For example the work Marea alta (High Tide) – which forms part of the series Patria – “is focused on Cuba’s most recent history and how from abroad everything looks beautiful, but the journey crossing the sea can be very dangerous. That’s why the piece is made based on many fragments, of mirrors that allude to what you can encounter on the way that is beyond your expectations,” she affirms.

Although she confesses that her dream work is “achieving the nothing, the ephemeral, what you see and don’t see,” she still hasn’t reached that point, but she is convinced that it is “very complicated to get to the simplicity of the nothing.”

On the other hand, the color red frequently appears in her work because, for her, “it is a symbol of the forbidden and the wished for; it is in our blood – which is a vital liquid -, but at the same time it is found in the traffic, in the economy – which can allude to danger, to the stop signal; it is the color of love and of passion and therefore very temperamental.”

LOCALIZATION:
Mabel Poblet Pujol (Cienfuegos, 1986)
Studio-Workshop Address: Calle 11, no. 256, entre J e I, El Vedado, Havana, Cuba
Email: studiosmabelpoblet@gmail.com and mabelpoblet@cubarte.cult.cu

 

 

  • Redacción OnCuba
    Redacción OnCuba
Previous Post

Bulevar Cubano is born with products “Made in Cuba”

Next Post

Habanos Festival: with the world’s best tobacco

Redacción OnCuba

Redacción OnCuba

Next Post
The 20th Habanos Festival began this Monday in the Havana Convention Center. Photo: Alejandro Ernesto / EFE.

Habanos Festival: with the world’s best tobacco

Billboard: Party with drums

Several U.S. Army Marines guard the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in Cuba during the visit by congressmen to Havana in February 2018. Photo: Alejandro Ernesto / EFE.

U.S. to maintain embassy in Cuba with minimum personnel

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

The conversation here is moderated according to OnCuba News discussion guidelines. Please read the Comment Policy before joining the discussion.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Read

  • The Enchanted Shrimp of the Cuban Dance

    6807 shares
    Share 2723 Tweet 1702
  • The Announced Measures and What Is Still Missing

    15 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • The story behind the “sister flags” of Cuba and Puerto Rico

    137 shares
    Share 55 Tweet 34
  • What those who don’t want “reforms” in Cuba actually want

    25 shares
    Share 10 Tweet 6
  • Sale and import of motor vehicles in Cuba expanded

    107 shares
    Share 43 Tweet 27

Most Commented

    • About us
    • Work with OnCuba
    • Terms of use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Moderation policy for comments
    • Contact us
    • Advertisement offers

    OnCuba and the OnCuba logo are registered® trademarks of Fuego Enterprises, Inc., its subsidiaries or divisions.
    OnCuba © by Fuego Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • World
    • Cuba
    • Cuba-USA
    • Opinion
      • Columns
      • Infographic
    • Culture
      • Billboard
    • Sports
    • Styles / Trends
    • Media
    • Special
    • Cuban Flavors

    OnCuba and the OnCuba logo are registered® trademarks of Fuego Enterprises, Inc., its subsidiaries or divisions.
    OnCuba © by Fuego Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Manage Consent
    To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    • Manage options
    • Manage services
    • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
    • Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    • {title}
    • {title}
    • {title}