GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Bodegón Tropical, 2025

GOLDEN CARGO: CONQUEST OF THE TROPICS

exhibition
exhibition
Feb 28–Mar 21
6:00pm
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Venue:
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095
ACT Gallery, MIT Wiesner Building E15-095

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the complex history of the United Fruit Company (UFC), a global banana exporter with deep ties to Greater Boston and MIT. The exhibition draws from several archives, including MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, established in 1921 by the Department of Naval Architecture. Known colloquially as "El Pulpo" (The Octopus), the United Fruit Company gained infamy for its far-reaching control over labor, immigration, and agriculture throughout Central America. The exhibition pairs original artworks with archival objects, photographs, documents, and ephemera.

Hector Membreño-Canales, born in Honduras to banana plantation workers, weaves historical and autobiographical narratives while exploring UFC archives. The exhibition creates visual metaphors connecting collective memory with personal history through historical artifacts, archival materials, and museum collections.

A centerpiece of the exhibition is a ship's bell from MIT's Francis Russell Hart Nautical Collection, one of the nation's oldest marine technology archives. The bell once rang aboard the S.S. Francis R. Hart, an oil tanker that flew the Honduran flag while serving the United Fruit Company. Hart, an 1889 MIT graduate, became president of the United Fruit Company in 1933 and maintained strong ties to Central America.

The photo collages in Golden Cargo feature altered and appropriated images from Harvard Business School's Baker Library archive. This collection encompasses over 75 United Fruit Company albums, containing more than 5,200 photographs from 1891 to 1962. The exhibition contextualizes these images with historical papers and books.

Golden Cargo: Conquest of the Tropics examines the United Fruit Company's local, national, and global impact. By the 1930s, the corporation had become Central America's largest employer and private landowner, controlling 3.5 million acres across Honduras, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panama, Colombia, Cuba, Jamaica, and Ecuador. In Guatemala alone, the company owned roughly 42 percent of the country's land—surpassing even the Guatemalan government's holdings. Historians have characterized this period as the United Fruit Company's attempt to purchase Guatemala.

Juxtaposing contemporary artworks with archival documents, the exhibition invites viewers to navigate between studio-created still lifes and institutional archives and artifacts.

Hector Membreño-Canales is a Honduran American artist, educator, and researcher based in Massachusetts. In 2023, he was appointed Francis C. Robertson Instructor of Visual Studies and Photography at Phillips Academy Andover and serves as a lecturer in the Art, Culture and Technology (ACT) program at MIT. In 2022, he completed the Smithsonian Institution's inaugural U.S. Army Monuments Officer Training.

Born in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, Membreño-Canales became a U.S. citizen in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He served more than a decade as a U.S. Army Public Affairs Officer with assignments in Iraq, El Salvador, Poland, Germany, and Canada. Using the Post-9/11 GI Bill, he earned a BFA in photography from the School of Visual Arts and an MFA from the Department of Art and Art History at Hunter College, City University of New York.

His work has received grants and awards from the Eddie Adams Workshop, Red Bull Arts, Magnum Foundation, and Harvard University. His photographs have been exhibited internationally, including at Triennale der Photographie Hamburg, Osnova Gallery Moscow, Aperture Foundation, the Delaware Contemporary, Athens Institute of Contemporary Art (ATHICA), Photoville, and FotoFest Houston. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Republic, Columbia Journalism Review, NPR, CNN, and L'Oeil de la Photographie.

ACT Gallery

Wiesner Building

E15-095

20 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Building location on the MIT Campus Map

MIT is committed to providing an environment that is accessible to individuals with disabilities. View the Accessibility Web App, designed for the MIT community to view accessible routes across the MIT campus. Please contact the event organizer directly for specific accessibility information or to discuss your needs.

This project was made possible by support from MIT Museum's Hart Nautical Gallery (Archives), the Banana Lounge, Arts at MIT, the MIT Program in Art, Culture, and Technology, and Harvard University's Baker Library.

2025-02-28
18:00
2025-03-21
8:00