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Monday, December 23, 2024 |
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Luhring Augustine opens an exhibition of Haitian art organized by artist Tomm El-Saieh |
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Hector Hyppolite, New Years Celebration, c.1948. Oil on board, 25 1/2 x 31 1/2 inches (64.8 x 80 cm). Private Collection. © Hector Hyppolite; Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York, and ElSaieh Gallery, PortauPrince, and CENTRAL FINE, Miami Beach. Photo: Farzad Owrang.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Luhring Augustine is presenting Ayiti Toma II: Faith, Family, and Resistance, an exhibition of Haitian art organized by artist Tomm El-Saieh in partnership with El Saieh Gallery, Port-au-Prince, and CENTRAL FINE, Miami Beach. On view in the Tribeca location from November 2, 2024 January 11, 2025, this project marks the first collaboration between Luhring Augustine and El-Saieh Gallery, and is a continuation of the collaboration between Luhring Augustine and CENTRAL FINE.
Ayiti Toma II is part of an ongoing series, conceived by Tomm El-Saieh, that explores Haitian art and culture. The absence of a first iteration (Ayiti Toma I) represents the erased culture of the Taíno people who called the island Ayiti, a name which became the revolutionary-era moniker chosen for Haiti by its people. Meaning land of the high mountains/From now onward, this land is our land, Ayiti Toma encapsulates the countrys history of survival and renewal. In the presentation at Luhring Augustine, the work of artists from various generations explores the deep roots of faith, the rich legacy of family, and the indomitable spirit of resistance that define Haitian culture and its artistic traditions.
Faith and family are interwoven throughout the works of the modern masters of Haitian art. Reflecting the profound spiritual and cultural essence of Vodou, the paintings of André Pierre and the grand maître, Hector Hyppolite are rich in their references to the natural world and the frequent depictions of Lwa, spirits who serve as intermediaries between humans and the divine. The symbolism evident in the metal sculptures of Georges Liautaud, and his student Murat Brierre, reference a deep connection to the earth and respect for ancestorism, which are central principles of Vodou. The Obin Family School of Painting, which includes Philomé and Sénèque Obin, emphasize the quotidian with depictions of everyday street life and images of resistance. Turning inward to the setting of the home, Luce Turniers portraits of family and neighbors capture a familiarity of both her sitters and of the distinct Caribbean aesthetic of the environment.
The works of the living artists in this exhibition blend the forms of their predecessors with contemporary concerns. Frantz Zéphirins paintings portray the natural and spiritual realms with a controlled chaos; a nephew of Antoine Obin, his work uniquely reinvents the tradition of The Obin School of Painting and recalls the works of Pierre and Hyppolite. Inspired by colloquial language and expressions, the symbolism and figuration in Jean Hérard Celeurs sculptures recall those of Liautaud and Brierre before him. The drapo of Myrlande Constant span the subjects of Vodou cosmology, history, and popular culture. Constants works are intricately beaded in her studio by her and her family, whereby artmaking and storytelling are ensured to be kept alive for future generations, as it has for the Obin family. In Haitian history, resistance can be traced as action against imperialism, a desire for national, religious, and cultural sovereignty, and as a passing-down of traditions and stories, which preserves memory and refuses oblivion.
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