The Catalonian-born and Cuba-based art critic Martí Casanovas delivered this lecture at a closing reception of the exhibition of avant-garde art called 1927, which included works by Eduardo Abela, Marcelo Pogolotti and Victor Manuel García, and that was mounted by artists and critics associated with the eponymous magazine in Havana. Printed in the June 15, 1927 issue of the magazine 1927: revista de avance, Casanovas’ speech clearly showed his alignment with the visual artists associated with 1927 and with the mural movement in Mexico, especially [the work of] Diego Rivera, and the native painters working in Lima and associated with José Carlos Mariátegui’s magazine, Amauta. Implicit in his criticism of the individualism of the “ultralists” and “stridentists” is his opposition to avant-garde movements in Mexico City, Buenos Aires, and elsewhere that fashioned themselves after Futurism and/or embraced the abstract visual idiom of Cubism, as well as Latin American artists who closely associated with the ultraist movement in Madrid. This criticism demonstrates that Casanovas was participating in a broader debate—waged by critics and poets in 1927, Amauta, and other Latin American avant-garde magazines during the 1920s—about the relative values of European avant-gardism, abstraction, and indigenous sources for creating a progressive and modern American art. Casanovas’ stated ambition to realize a new continental art also reflects the feeling shared by his peers that, in the face of Europe’s cultural and economic decline, America was the location where the core values of Western culture would find an opportunity to be reborn.