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Culture

I have already mentioned music and dance and most restaurants and bars have small groups entertaining who subsequently move around the patrons seeking payment.  Some of these are very good but once or twice I refused to pay on the grounds that we had had to move to a different table to get away from the racket and hear ourselves think.  Similarly, two restaurants we went to at night featured flamenco dancing.

 

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There are lots of artists in Havana.  The art varies between paintings mass produced for the tourists, in ‘Pro Hart’ fashion, to genuine original works; some of a high quality.  The former are on cheap roughly primed canvas, not Masonite a la Pro, and can be purchased according to size; for around $10 a square foot.  These are described as ‘original oils’, in that each is hand made and the brush strokes differ, but roughly the same painting is produced numerous times and in different sizes.  Subjects vary from cars to nudes; still life to landscape; religious icons and copies of other painters work; particularly Fernando Botero.

 

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A Botero - this one in the fine arts museum in Mexico City

 

There is a huge market at the harbour-side displaying these paintings; in addition to many galleries and street art locations. 

In the second category I went into a couple of studios and discussed their work with artists I saw painting in styles from neo-cubism to abstract expressionism.  Art it seems is a kind of small scale manufacture replacing the industry that once took place in abandoned factories across the country.

 

 

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Travel

China

 

 

I first visited China in November 1986.  I was representing the New South Wales Government on a multinational mission to our Sister State Guangdong.  My photo taken for the trip is still in the State archive [click here].  The theme was regional and small business development.  The group heard presentations from Chinese bureaucrats and visited a number of factories in rural and industrial areas in Southern China.  It was clear then that China was developing at a very fast rate economically. 

Read more: China

Fiction, Recollections & News

Reminiscing about the 50’s

 

This article was written in 2012 and already some of the changes noted have changed.
For example, in the decade that followed, 'same sex' marriage became legal. And sadly, several of those friends and relations I've mentioned, including my brother, died. 
No doubt, in another decade, there will be yet more change.

 

 

Elsewhere on this site, in the article Cars, Radios, TV and other Pastimes,   I've talked about aspects of my childhood in semi-rural Thornleigh on the outskirts of Sydney, Australia. I've mentioned various aspects of school and things we did as kids.

A great many things have changed.  I’ve already described how the population grew exponentially. Motor vehicles finally replaced the horse in everyday life.  We moved from imperial measurements and currency to decimal currency and metric measures.  The nation gained its self-confidence particularly in the arts and culture.  I’ve talked about the later war in Vietnam and Australia embracing of Asia in place of Europe.

Here are some more reminiscences about that world that has gone forever.

Read more: Reminiscing about the 50’s

Opinions and Philosophy

Six degrees of separation, conspiracy and wealth

 

 

Sometimes things that seem quite different are, when looked at more closely, related. 

 

Read more: Six degrees of separation, conspiracy and wealth

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