Jamaican art

Public Monument, Negro Aroused, Kingston Waterfront

Jamaican art dates back to Jamaica's indigenous Taino Indians who created zemis, carvings of their gods, for ritual spiritual purposes. The demise of this culture after European colonisation heralded a new era of art production more closely related to traditional tastes in Europe and created by itinerant artists keen to return picturesque images of the 'new world' to Europe. Foremost among these were Agostino Brunias, Philip Wickstead, James Hakewill and J. B. Kidd.

Perhaps the earliest artist to take a more Jamaican centered approach to the island culture was Isaac Mendes Belisario (1795–1849), whose portfolio of lithographs Sketches of Character, In Illustration of the Habits, Occupation, and Costume of the Negro Population in the Island of Jamaica, published in collaboration with the lithographer Adolphe Duperly in 1837-38, documents activities of slaves immediately after their emancipation.[1]

The modern movement

The National Gallery of Jamaica dates the nationalist oriented art movement to the beginning of the twentieth century. The arrival of Edna Manley in Jamaica in 1922 since her observations and journals on art and artists from that time has provided early documentation on the movement's development and his work Bead Seller (1922) has been used as the earliest work in the National Gallery of Jamaica's permanent collection of mode and educated in the UK, she publicly criticized Jamaica's local art work as "anaemic" believing that it demonstrated a preoccupation with European styled landscapes and portraiture using traditional techniques that insufficiently reflected Jamaica's culture or its people.[2]

Her support for volunteer art classes at the Institute of Jamaica that fostered the talents of artists such as Albert Huie, Ralph Campbell, Henry Daley and Osmond Watson would become formalized into an art program offered at the Jamaica School of Art, an institution that even later was named the Edna Manley College of Visual and Performing Arts as a tribute to her contribution.[3]

During the 1950s and 1960s many of Jamaica's artists received formal training in Britain as a result of scholarships provided by the British Council. Ralph Campbell attended classes at Goldsmiths College,[4] Barrington Watson trained at the Royal College of Art,[5] Osmond Watson at St Martins.[6] Each developed their own representational styles influenced by post-impressionism, realism and cubism respectively and all returned to teach at the Jamaica School of Art.

Jamaican art since the island's Independence in 1962 swings between two styles that Chief Curator David Boxer has defined as "mainstream" and "intuitive".[7] The first references Jamaica's trained artists more often exposed to art trends and styles abroad, and the second, the 'intuitive' movement comprising artists who maintain stronger links with African forms of expression, are predominantly closed to any external influences, and are usually self-taught. During the 1980s a trend towards the fusion of these two styles was apparent in the work of artists such as Milton George, Robert Cookhoorne (aka African or Omari Ra) and Douglas Wallace (aka Makandal or Khalfani Ra). Smithsonian curator Vera Hyatt labelled them New Imagists referencing the way the body in convulsive forms dominated their canvases.[8]

Recent trends

In the 1990s a greater awareness of post-modern trends and a connection with Jamaica's wider diaspora communities in Britain, Canada and the USA saw many artists such as Albert Chong, Anna Henriques, Petrona Morrison, Margaret Chen, David Boxer reappraising their personal cultural histories, re-visiting the sites of their ancestral origins (be they indigenous Amerindian cultures, African or European) having a greater need to understand and visualise the Jamaican experience and their own sense of place within the Caribbean.[9] But events in Jamaica have overtaken these concerns turning an even younger generation of artist's attention inwards.

Whereas many of Jamaica's contemporary artists in the 1990s were concerned with post-colonial issues of identity and place and explored this through group shows such as the Caribbean biennales and regional exhibitions that allowed them to establish commonality with artists from other islands, art of this past decade appears to be shifting in focus once again[10] Younger artists such as Ebony Patterson [Ebony G. Patterson], Michael Elliot, Phillip Thomas, Christopher Irons and Peter Rickards are engaging with issues of violence, homophobia and social dislocation that have been a feature of Jamaica's recent past. These are events and trends that are still unfolding but they suggest that this generation of artists is having to compete with the more glaring aspects of the country's popular culture related to dance hall, ghetto fabulous fashions, street art, and the aesthetics of bling funerals[11] for a stake in the nation's visual memory.[12]

See also

References

  1. Tim Barringer, Gillian Forrester, Barbaro Martinez-Ruiz (Eds.,) Art and Emancipation in Jamaica: Belisario and his Worlds, Yale Center for British Art, 2007
  2. Daily Gleaner, 13 September 1934
  3. Petrine Archer- Straw, Fifty Years -Sixty Artists, 2000
  4. David Boxer, Jamaican Art 1922 -1982, Smithsonian Institution, exh. cat.
  5. New Imagists in Jamaican Art. 1987. Exhib. cat., illus. Group exhibition. Included: Milton George, Khalfani Ra, Omarian Ra. WASHINGTON (DC)
  6. New World Imagery: Contemporary Jamaican Art, (exh. cat.) South Bank and Touring, 1996
  7. Infinite Island (exh. cat.) Brooklyn Museum, 2008.
  8. Annie Paul, “ ‘No Grave Cannot Hold My Body Down’: Rituals of Death and Burial in Postcolonial Jamaica,” Small Axe, no. 23 (June 2007): 142–46
  9. Veerle Poupeye, “What Times Are These? Visual Art and Social Crisis in Postcolonial Jamaica”, Small Axe, Vol 13, no 2. June, 2009.

Bibliography

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