Havana Living Today: Cuban Home Style Now

Presented by architect, Hermes Mallea
Speaker/Performer Name
Hermes Mallea
Uptown Campus
Woldernberg Art Center
Freeman Auditorium
Other location info
Tulane University

Two special events in New Orleans featuring Celebrated Cuban-American author and architect Hermes Mallea will be co-sponsored by The New Orleans Hispanic Heritage Foundation (NOHHF), Tulane University Center for Inter-American Policy and Research (CIPR), and Cuban and Caribbean Studies Institute (CCSI), along with The Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans (PRC).

  Thursday, November 10, 2022 6:00-8:00PM 

Design in the Tropics: Cuban Design Excellence with Hermes Mallea 

Mr. Mallea will present Havana Living Today: Cuban Home Style Now, a look at the continued and storied design excellence that can be seen in homes of Havana’s most elite residents. His talk will be followed by a conversation about excellence in global design, between Mr. Mallea and local interior designer and PRC board member Nomita Joshi-Gupta. A reception hosted by the PRC Multi-Cultural Heritage Committee and a book signing will follow. The book will be available for purchase on site.

923 Tchoupitoulas Street, New Orleans, LA. 70130.

Event is at The Preservation Resource Center (PRC).

  Friday, November 11, 2022 6:00-8:00PM 

Reception and Book Signing

Mr. Mallea will present Havana Living Today: Cuban Home Style Now. Following his talk, a reception will be hosted by the New Orleans Hispanic Heritage Foundation and a book signing will take place in Woodward Way, just outside the Freeman Auditorium. The book will be available for purchase ($55) at the event by Garden District Book Shop.

Event is at Tulane University Freeman Auditorium at the Woldenberg Art Center on Newcomb Circle.  

Admission to both events is free and open to the public. Seating is limited.

 

HAVANA LIVING TODAY: Cuban Home Style Now celebrates the homeowners’ individual flair and ingenuity and brings the reader inside a world that has never been presented in this depth, countering long-held preconceptions about how people live in this vibrant city.  Mallea sees these interiors as evidence of the Cuban peoples’ hopes for their future and their vision of what Havana Style might be.