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La Fuente de las Antilles


This work, first unveiled in 1977, was elemental in reviving Cuba’s sculpturing traditions and making Las Tunas its HQ. The sculpture comprises a huge fountain filled with elaborate interwoven figures symbolizing the emergence of the Greater Antilles' indigenous people from the Caribbean Sea. Cuba is represented by an India dormida (sleeping Taíno woman).


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Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

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1. Museo Memorial Mártires de Barbados

0.06 MILES

Las Tunas' most evocative sight is in the former home of Carlos Leyva González, an Olympic fencer killed in the nation's worst terrorist atrocity: the…

2. Monumento Al Trabajo

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The 8m-high abstract Monumento Al Trabajo by José Peláez pays cubist homage to Cuban workers.

3. Memorial Vicente García

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A colonial-era structure near the eponymous park that commemorates Las Tunas' great War of Independence hero who captured the town from the Spanish in…

5. Statue of José Martí

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In the central hub of Plaza Martí an inventive bronze statue of the 'apostle of Cuban independence' by Rita Longa doubles as a solar clock. It was opened…

7. Mestizaje

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A multifaced representation of Cuba’s mixed races in the Parque de la India near the bus station.

8. Monumento a Alfabetización

0.75 MILES

The pencil-like Monumento a Alfabetización marks the act passed in Las Tunas on November 16, 1961, to stamp out illiteracy.