Nadia Huggins, Selections from the series Circa No Future, 2014, Digital photographs, Courtesy of the artist
Marianela Orozco, Horizons, 2012, Digital print, Courtesy of the artist
Miguel Luciano, Amani Kites, SmART Power, Kenya, Courtesy of the Artist
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables (detail), 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables, 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables (detail), 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables (detail), 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables (detail), 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Camille Chedda, Wholesale Degradables (detail), 2014-2015, Acrylic paint on plastic bags, (photo by Jose Lima)
Kishan Munroe, The Sinking of HMBS Flamingo, 2014, Oil and acrylic on canvas, Collection of Royal Bahamas Defence Force
Didier William, Dancing, Pouring, Crackling and Mourning, 2015
The Sculpture Park at Florida International University
Elizabeth Turk in her studio
Frost Art Museum
Florida International University
Sixty-seven contemporary Caribbean artists
with roots in:
Haiti,
the Dominican Republic, Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Curacao, Aruba, Saint
Maarten,
Martinique, Guadeloupe, Trinidad, Jamaica, The Bahamas, Barbados and Saint Vincent. |
Relational Undercurrents:
Contemporary Art of the Caribbean
Archipelago (Oct. 13 – Jan. 13)
headlines the powerful new season of exhibitions and programming for Art Basel 2018 at Florida International University’s Frost Art Museum in Miami.
This is the first major survey of
this size and scope of 21st century art by 67 contemporary Caribbean artists representing 14 Caribbean countries, whose works offer expansive perspectives that transcend the boundaries imposed upon Caribbean cultures.
“Because
of Miami’s geographic
proximity to the Caribbean nations, as well as our cultural mosaic which Caribbean cultures have shaped, it was important for us to bring this exhibition to Miami during Art Basel season,” said Dr. Jordana Pomeroy, the Director of the museum. “Our new season opens up a dialogue about global commonalities rather than differences, from ecological changes to societal values around the world.”
Nearly seventy works
by
Caribbean painters, installation artists, sculptors, photographers, video and performance artists connect through ideas that go beyond language barriers, politics, and historic colonial divides. Artists in Relational Undercurrents include: Allora & Calzadilla, Edouard Duval-Carrie, Adler Guerrier, Deborah Jack, Glenda Leon, Beatriz Santiago Munoz, Angel Otero, Manuel Pina, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Jimmy Robert and Didier William, among others.
Features more than 67
contemporary artists with
roots in Haiti,
the
Dominican Republic, Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Curacao, Aruba, Saint Maarten, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Trinidad, Jamaica, The
Bahamas,
Barbados and
Saint Vincent.
Departing from the premise
that the concept of Latin America favors mainland countries, the exhibition proposes a mapping of the region that begins with the islands. Arising from a legacy of colonialism, recurrent themes include race and ethnicity, history, identity, sovereignty, migration and sustainability.
The
works in this exhibition
speak for the Caribbean’s indigenous peoples whose homes were fractured and divided by colonialism. These are spaces that were mercilessly exploited for labor and goods by distant European monarchies. This area also marks the site of one of the West’s first rebellions (the
Haitian slave revolt which led
to the independence of the island in 1804) and the Cuban War of Independence in 1898, a byproduct of the Spanish- American War.
The
Caribbean is inhabited by
many different indigenous cultures whose languages include Spanish, Dutch, English, French and Creole.
Although
the Caribbean
has been fragmented by centuries of tyranny and domination, the contemporary artists in this exhibition draw upon themes of connection that often envision what lies beyond imposed borderlines.
|
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