Los Carpinteros

Los Carpinteros, an influential Cuban artist collective, emerged in the early 1990s during a period of cultural and political transformation in Cuba. Founded by Marco Antonio Castillo Valdés, Dagoberto Rodríguez Sánchez, and Alexandre Arrechea (who later departed the group in 2003), the collective forged a distinctive voice in contemporary art by blending architecture, design, and sculpture with social commentary and conceptual wit.

The name “Los Carpinteros,” meaning “The Carpenters,” reflects their roots in craftsmanship and their deliberate rejection of the notion of the individual genius artist. Instead, they embraced a collaborative approach, reimagining the traditional role of the artist and emphasizing the collective over the personal. Their work is often playful, yet imbued with sharp observations about politics, consumerism, urbanism, and the intersections of function and form.

Educated at the Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA) in Havana, the members of Los Carpinteros developed their practice during Cuba's "Special Period," a time of economic hardship and profound ideological shifts after the collapse of the Soviet Union. This context deeply influenced their artistic vision. They began by crafting drawings, sculptures, and installations that mimicked utilitarian objects—beds, chairs, bathtubs, buildings—but rendered them surreal, dysfunctional, or fantastical.

Los Carpinteros’ work often combines precise, almost architectural draftsmanship with absurd or ironic elements. For example, they might create a drawing of a toolbox that folds out into a bed, or construct a life-sized installation of a swimming pool carved from a slab of wood. This blending of the practical with the imaginary evokes a sense of wonder while subtly critiquing utopian ideals and the failures of modernist aspirations.

Their installations and large-scale sculptures have been exhibited in leading international venues, including the Venice Biennale, MoMA in New York, Tate Modern in London, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Their global presence reflects the universality of their themes, even as their work remains rooted in Cuban identity and the post-socialist experience.

In 2018, after more than two decades of collaboration, Los Carpinteros officially disbanded. However, the end of the collective did not mark the end of their artistic journeys. Each member has continued to pursue an active and evolving individual practice. Alexandre Arrechea, Marco Castillo, and Dagoberto Rodríguez have all developed unique bodies of work that, while distinct from their time in the collective, still engage with themes of social structure, materiality, and cultural identity.

Despite their separation, the legacy of Los Carpinteros endures as a testament to the power of collaboration, conceptual rigor, and creative innovation in the face of cultural and political change. Their work continues to resonate not just as art objects, but as narratives—stories told through materials and forms that challenge our understanding of utility, beauty, and meaning in a shifting global context.