The Star Malaysia - Star2

A place to paint

- By SARAH MARSH

LACK of money has not kept Remigio Hernandez from making striking art. Without formal training or access to supplies, the Cuban artist has still managed to turn his ramshackle home into a museum featuring sculptures made from scraps of aluminium, busts moulded from mud and portraits daubed onto discarded television­s.

Museum of Baby, in the sleepy town of Moron in central Cuba, is named after Hernandez's late wife Barbara, or “Baby”.

In one life-size sculpture, she gallops off on a white steed into paradise. In a painting, she is the Mona Lisa.

“I go looking for things thrown away in the rubbish, aluminum, cardboard, and I find ways to recycle them,” says Hernandez, dubbed locally “The Van Gogh of Moron.”

Frowning, the 64-year old says he is happy to remain penniless in a world where greed and ambition have caused so many wars and tragedies. Family and religion are his subject matter.

“I want distance myself from all that and live dedicating my painting to poverty, humility,” he says.

“What I have is a history, and I consider history to be greater than fame or money.”

Hernandez has lived alone with his dogs since his wife died three years ago. He scrapes a living by giving cars and walls a new lick of paint or painting small landscapes and portraits.

But in a country where the average state salary is around US$25 (RM111) per month, his clients give him whatever they can, sometimes just donating him leftover paint.

The artist gets basic foodstuffs from the “libreta”, or rations book, supplement­ing that with bananas and mangos from his backyard.

His passion for making art is all consuming. Hernandez has no mattress, just a bed frame covered with metal sheets. When an acquaintan­ce gave him a large piece of cardboard to make it a tad more comfortabl­e, he used it instead to paint a religious scene inspired by a canvas by El Greco.

“I can't stop painting, I was born like this,” he says.

European masters El Greco, Rembrandt, Da Vinci and Van Gogh are among the artists who inspire him. In his dark shack, he has grubby piles of books and magazines that he has been given or found in the rubbish.

“I have a few books but I like doing original things,” he says.

"My first teacher was life itself." While most of his work is earnest, some displays classic Cuban humour in the face of adversity. In one sculpture, a fisherman dangles his rod into the backyard that floods when it rains heavily. – Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? A painting representi­ng artist Hernandez and his late wife is seen at his selfmade Museum of Baby at his home in Moron, Cuba.
— Reuters A painting representi­ng artist Hernandez and his late wife is seen at his selfmade Museum of Baby at his home in Moron, Cuba.

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