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E-raamat: Patchwork: Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789386486
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789386486
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The patchwork is an apt metaphor for the region not only because of its colourfulness and the making of something whole out of fragments but as an attempt to make coherence out of disorder. The seeking of coherence was the exact process of putting together this book and foregrounds the process of Caribbean societies forging identity and identities out of plural and at times conflicting and contested groups that came to call the region home.





Within the metaphor of the patchwork however is the question, where are the vernacular needlework artists within the visual art tradition of the Caribbean? The introduction sets out to both clarify and rectify this situation, and several common themes flow through the following essays and interviews. Themes include that that the land and colonization remain baseline issues for several Caribbean artists who stage and restage the history of conquest and empire in varying ways. That artists in the region amalgamate as part of their practice and seem to prefer an open-endedness to art making as opposed to expressing fidelity to a particular medium. That artists and scholars alike are dismantling long-held perceptions of what Caribbean art is thought to be, and are challenging boundaries in Caribbean art. 





These are among the issues addressed in the book as it looks at ecological concerns and questions of sustainability, how the practices of the artists and their art defy the easy categorization of the region, and the placement of women in the visual art ecology of the Caribbean. The latter is one of the most contested areas of the book. Readers should come away with the sense that questions of race, colour, and class loom large within questions of gender in the Jamaican art scene and that the book, dedicated to Sane Mae Dunkley, aims to insert vernacular needleworkers into the visual art scene in both Jamaica and the larger Caribbean.





Audience will include researchers and scholars of Caribbean and African diasporic art, college students, those interested in post-colonial studies, Caribbean artists, art professionals interested in a wider, globalized view of contemporary art; students curious to know about the many phases of art production throughout the Caribbean. General readers interested in the culture of the region.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(6)
The Importance of Place
7(46)
1 Wendy Nanan Talks about the Importance of Place in Her Works
9(5)
2 Annalee Davis Uses Art to Unearth and Interrogate
14(4)
3 For Deborah Anzinger, Ecology Is of Utmost Importance
18(8)
4 Puerto Rico's Lionel Cruet's Artworks Are Focused on the Intimate Relationship with the Environment
26(8)
5 The In-between Places of Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow's Visual Art Practice
34(5)
6 Robin Farquharson, Unplugged
39(14)
The Process of Art-Making
53(44)
7 Garfield Morgan Discusses an Intuitive Approach to Art-Making
55(11)
8 Jasmine Thomas-Girvan Utilizes the Subject of Loss to Right the Wrongs of the Past and the Present
66(4)
9 Alicia Brown Revisits and Revises Colonial Narratives within the Languages of Portraiture and Painting
70(9)
10 Living Gratefully: An Interview with Earl McKenzie
79(6)
11 Katrina Coombs Discusses Her Fetish for Creating Fine-Art Fiber Works
85(4)
12 Olivia McGilchrist Explores Caribbean Futures in Virtual Reality Narratives
89(8)
Women and Visual Culture
97(48)
13 Using Objects to Convey Meaning and Break Silences: An Interview with Material Culture Expert Steeve Buckridge
99(17)
14 Master Jamaican Mat-Maker Sane Mae Dunkley Wove Together the Story of the Jamaican People
116(6)
15 Women and Art An Interview with O'Neil Lawrence
122(6)
16 Jamaica's Rich Bio-Diversity Is Painter Amy Laskin's Muse
128(8)
17 Oneika Russell Engages the Tropical Body and Caribbean Identity
136(5)
18 For Amanda Coulson, Women Artists in Particular Should Remain Vigilant
141(4)
Challenging Boundaries
145(42)
19 Jaime Lee Loy Walks the Fine Line between the Familiar and the Unfamiliar
147(6)
20 Sheena Rose Seeks to Challenge People (and Boundaries) with Her Work
153(5)
21 Exploring the Art of Female Sexual Desires
158(3)
22 Uanor Alleyne's Female Figures Grounded in Nature as an Assertion and Reclamation of Inner Selves
161(10)
23 La Vaughn Belle's Contemporary Art Practice of Speaking in Layers
171(6)
24 Artist Kereina Chang Fatt Uses Her Work to Address Relationships, Community, and Connectedness
177(10)
Defying Easy Categorization
187(42)
25 Krista Thompson Brings a Critical Eye to What Is Confined to the Footnotes of Art History
189(4)
26 For Art Historian Edward J. Sullivan, the Caribbean (and Caribbean Artists, like Puerto Rico's Francisco Oller) Defy Easy Categorization
193(12)
27 Queen Victoria Give We Free: Tackling Victorian Jamaica in the Visual Arts
205(8)
28 Pre-Raphaelite Sisters Exhibition Features Jamaican: An Interview with Jan Marsh
213(5)
29 Art Historian and Curator Allison Thompson Believes That Art Is a Forum to Envision What Is Possible
218(5)
30 Where Others See Fragmentation, Tatiana Flores Sees Continuity in Caribbean Art
223(6)
Appendix 229(6)
About the Author 235
Jacqueline Bishop is a writer, visual artist and scholar born in Jamaica who now lives in the United States, where she is a professor in the school of Liberal Studies at New York University.