Gonzalo Córdoba, Mid-century Turiguano Mahogany Sofa, DUJO , Cuba, 1960s
- Dimensions :
- H75 x W220 x D80
- Color :
- burgundy
- Material :
- wood
- Style :
- vintage
This iconic and extremely rare “Turiguanó” sofa is one of the defining pieces of Cuban modernism. Designed by Gonzalo Córdoba, chief designer of DUJO, it was created around 1959–1960 for Fidel Castro’s Palace of the Revolution in Havana. Crafted from solid Cuban mahogany, the sofa symbolizes the transition between pre-revolutionary luxury design and the aesthetic of the new socialist state. The Turiguanó series embodied both the organic spirit of the Caribbean and the disciplined geometry of functional modernism. Córdoba’s work stood at the intersection of craftsmanship, national identity, and ideology – making this piece not merely a design object, but a document of Cuban cultural history. The model was documented in the 2024 Cranbrook Art Museum (USA) exhibition “A Modernist Regime: Cuban Mid-Century Design”, where only the Turiguanó Chair was displayed. No sofa example was included, making this configuration significantly rarer. This particular piece has been faithfully restored with authentic cowhide upholstery in the original reddish hue, preserving its material honesty and historical integrity. Complete with provenance documentation and museum-grade restoration, it stands as a unique surviving artifact of Cuban modernism and Fidel Castro’s era of design diplomacy.