86 minutes SDH Captioned Study Guide Grades Grades 9-12, College, Adults Directed by Alysa Nahmias, Benjamin Murray DVD Purchase $295, Rent $95 US Release Date: 2012 Copyright Date: 2011 DVD ISBN: 1-93777-239-X Subjects Anthropology Art/Architecture Central America/The Caribbean Cuba Design Developing World Geography History Human Rights Humanities International Studies Latino and Chicano Studies Political Science Revolution Russian/Slavic Studies Sociology Awards and Festivals Film Independent Spirit Award Best Reportage, Montreal Festival International du Film sur l'Art Documentary Jury Prize, Salem Film Festival Special Jury Prize, San Diego Latino Film Festival Jury Prize, Semana Internacional de Cine Jury Prize, Montreal FIFA Festival Jury Prize, Valladolid International Film Festival Los Angeles Film Festival Camden International Film Festival Hawaii International Film Festival New York City Architecture and Design Film Festival Minneapolis-St. Paul Latin Film Festival Alexandria Film Festival Denver Starz Film Festival Tuscon Loft Film Festival Houston Cinema Arts Festival Boston Latino International Film Festival Havana International Film Festival Palm Springs International Film Festival Portland International Film Festival Glasgow International Film Festival Dublin International Film Festival Cinequest San Jose Film Festival Miami International FIlm Festival Cleveland International Film Festival Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival Filmfest DC Chicago Architecture and Design Film Festival Full Frame Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam Bosch Art Film Festival Crossroads Film Festival Buenos Aires International Film Festival Izmir International Film Festival Montclair Film Festival Docaviv Film Festival Millennium Festival Seoul Int'l Architecture Film Fest |
Unfinished Spaces Multi-layered story of Cuba's National Art Schools project, designed by three young artists in the wake of Castro's Revolution.
Note: There are two versions of this program on the same DVD: 86-minutes and 58-minutes. Cuba's ambitious National Art Schools project, designed by three young artists, Ricardo Porro, Vittorio Garatti, and Roberto Gottardi, in the wake of Castro's Revolution, is neglected, nearly forgotten, then ultimately rediscovered as a visionary architectural masterpiece. In 1961, three young, visionary architects were commissioned by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara to create Cuba's National Art Schools on the grounds of a former golf course in Havana, Cuba. Construction of their radical designs began immediately and the school's first classes soon followed. Dancers, musicians and artists from all over the country reveled in the beauty of the schools, but as the dream of the Revolution quickly became a reality, construction was abruptly halted and the architects and their designs were deemed irrelevant in the prevailing political climate. Forty years later the schools are in use, but remain unfinished and decaying. Castro has invited the exiled architects back to finish their unrealized dream. UNFINISHED SPACES features intimate footage of Fidel Castro, showing his devotion to creating a worldwide showcase for art, and it also documents the struggle and passion of three revolutionary artists. Reviews "A measured and provocative story...The film masterfully reflects the vicissitudes of Castro's support of cultural projects. The young filmmakers clearly demonstrate how the architectural history of an important project allows viewers to better comprehend the complicated history of a vibrant and controversial country." Judith Bettelheim, Professor Emerita of Art History, San Francisco State University, Adjunct Lecturer and Curator, UCLA, Author, AFROCUBA Works on Paper, 1968-2003 andTranscultural Pilgrim: Three Decades of Work by José Bedia "The pursuit of creative expression is a basic human instinct regardless of race, economic status or ethnicity. This film shows how the physical structures of the schools of Cubanacán have become a memorial to the talent of three individual architects, the beauty they accomplished and that which was never realized due to the constraints of repression. The film is historically informative of a period which is seldom documented and constitutes a riveting testimony of the endurance and tenacity of these Cuban artists who created their visions under the most dire conditions." Isabel Alvarez Borland, Murray Professor of Arts and Humanities, College of the Holy Cross, Author, Cuban-American Literature of Exile: From Person to Persona "Unfinished Spaces is an absorbing chronicle of a revolutionary architectural achievement, its neglect during changing political times, and the rebirth of interest in the buildings and their architects. It's also a personal history, exploring the unfinished spaces in the lives of the three visionary architects who had to rebuild their lives and careers after their projects fell into disfavor...Essential viewing for students of architecture, Latin American studies, history and politics, and anyone who appreciates a moving human interest story." Nadine Covert, New York Delegate, Montreal International Festival of Films on Art, and formerly Executive Director, Educational Film Library Association "Few buildings show the results of cultural and political policy as clearly as the National Art Schools of Cuba. Established idealistically in the 1960s, victims of ideology in succeeding decades, rehabilitated after the 1980s and abandoned again, these handsome buildings are explained by several of the original architects and later participants. This is a well-constructed and admirably photographed film that should appeal to the general public as well as to political scientists and lovers of architecture." Carol Krinsky, Professor of Art History, Director of Undergraduate Studies, New York University "Truly exceptional...Confirms that the real power of architecture lies in its ability to both capture the spirit of a place, time and people, and to bring this forward into presence in contemporary experience...The film also imparts a cautionary tale about the way political expediency often goes against both common sense and the human spirit, leading some architects to ignore both disciplinary principles as well as their own best instincts about what is the right thing to do. In the end, the story of the art schools is about the fragility of architecture and the fickleness of those who commission it, but, more importantly, it is also about the strength and lasting importance of architecture, and how even when it is abandoned by those who built it, it can continue to evoke the most noble ideals and provide the most enriching experiences for those who inhabit it." Robert McCarter, practicing architect, Professor of Architecture, Washington University in St. Louis, Author, Understanding
Architecture: A Primer on Architecture as Experience, Louis I. Kahn, and Frank Lloyd Wright: Critical Lives "A poignant tale of tenacious dreams and obstacles, the film reminds us of the crucial interplay between politics and the built environment. Unfinished Spaces captures the pulse of collective optimism and subsequent anguish in the early days of the revolution. The movie provides nuanced original material that will be an important resource to both specialized and general audiences. It is not only relevant to the architecture public, but also to those interested in the arts, humanities, history, culture and urban studies. Showing the buildings as protagonists, the film eloquently reminds us of the importance of being able to dream, to think beyond given rules and conventions, and to reinvent them." Irina Verona, Principal Architect, IVARCH, Editor, Praxis: A Journal of Writing and Building "An engaging, intimate, and humane portrait that explores the lives of little-known designers and opens broad questions about the relationship between architecture and the history of ideas." Dr. Paul Niell, Assistant Professor of Art History, Florida State University "Unfinished Spaces is an evocative and beautifully filmed portrait of Cuba's National School of Arts, as a crucible for artistic creation that defied all kinds of dogma and elitism. But more than that, the film is a compelling account of an extraordinary period of Cuban cultural history as told by the architects, artists, and students who lived through it." Sujatha Fernandes, Associate Professor of Sociology, Queens College-City University of New York, Author, Cuba Represent! Cuban Arts, State Power, and the Making of New Revolutionary Cultures and Who Can Stop the Drums? Urban Social Movements in Chávez's Venezuela "Beautifully filmed...Manages to capture and convey in an hour and a half fifty years of a contradictory and tormenting history...[but] leaves the audience hopeful that Utopia is still possible. Indeed, in spite of the political ups-and-downs, the film is an affirmation that the power of the arts is always stronger than politics. This film is a must for any class on documentary filmmaking, Latin American Studies, Cultural Studies, courses on Cuban culture, and, of course, on Architecture." Dr. Lillian Manzor, Associate Professor, Modern Languages and Literatures, Director, Cuban Theater Digital Archive, University of Miami, Author, Marginality Beyond Return: Gender, Racial and Linguistic Politics in U.S.-Cuban Theater "A wonderful addition to library DVD collections about art and art history. Highly recommended." The Midwest Book Review "Unfinished Spaces becomes the story of how architecture can inspire...as well as the story of Cuba itself, a revolution whose spirit was eroded over time. It's a specific story that becomes a broader one as Murray and Nahmias go more deeply into the innovations of the doomed buildings." Calgary Herald "Unfinished Spaces becomes the story of how architecture can inspire...As well as the story of Cuba itself, a revolution whose spirit was eroded over time. It's a specific story that becomes a broader one as Murray and Nahmias go more deeply into the innovations of the doomed buildings. Eventually even Castro himself enters the picture to talk about what happened to an idea whose time is still waiting to come." Jay Stone, Ottawa Citizen "Lucidly filmed...A stirring study... Absorbing." Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter "A witty survey (and dismantling) of Cuban politics." Earnest Hardy, The Village Voice |