The art of Wifredo Lam emerges as a vibrant crossroads between Caribbean heritage and European avant-garde, inviting us to rethink the contours of modernism itself. With roots in Cuba yet formative experiences in Spain and France, Lam forged a visual language that speaks of diaspora, hybridity and political resistance.
Now, the major U.S. retrospective titled “Wifredo Lam: When I Don’t Sleep, I Dream” at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, running from November 10 2025 to April 11 2026, marks a turning point in the reception of his work. In this blog we trace how Lam’s “Trojan-horse” strategy of inserting Afro-Caribbean culture into the heart of modernism unfolds across his career, why his “laboratory” years matter, and how his legacy resonates today on a global scale.







