In Haiti, the Art of Resilience
Within weeks of January's devastating earthquake, Haiti's surviving painters and sculptors were taking solace from their work
- By Bill Brubaker
- Photographs by Alison Wright
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 7)
At the Gingerbread gallery in Pétionville, I was introduced to a 70-year-old sculptor who wore an expression of utter despondence. “I have no home. I have no income. And there are days when me and my family don’t eat,” Nacius Joseph told me. Looking for financial support, or at least a few words of encouragement, he was visiting the galleries that had bought and sold his work over the years.
Joseph told gallery owner Axelle Liautaud that his days as a woodcarver, creating figures such as La Sirene, the voodoo queen of the ocean, were over. “All my tools are broken,” he said. “I can’t work. All of my apprentices, the people who helped me, have left Port-au-Prince, gone to the provinces. I’m very discouraged. I have lost everything!”
“But don’t you love what you’re doing?” Liautaud asked.
Joseph nodded.
“Then you have to find a way to do it. This is a situation where you have to have some drive because everyone has problems.”
Joseph nodded again, but looked to be near tears.
Though the gallery owners were themselves hurting, many were handing out money and art supplies to keep the artists employed.
At her gallery a few blocks away, Monnin told me that in the days following the quake she distributed $14,000 to more than 40 artists. “Right after the earthquake, they simply needed money to buy food,” she said. “You know, 90 percent of the artists I work with lost their homes.”
Jean-Emmanuel “Mannu” El Saieh, whose late father, Issa, was one of the earliest promoters of Haitian art, was paying a young painter’s medical bills. “I just talked to him on the phone, and you don’t have to be a doctor to know he’s still suffering from shock,” El Saieh said at his gallery, just up a rutted road from the Oloffson hotel, which survived the quake.
Though most of the artists I encountered had become homeless, they did not consider themselves luckless. They were alive, after all, and aware that the tremblement de terre had killed many of their friends and colleagues, such as the octogenarian owners of the Rainbow Gallery, Carmel and Cavour Delatour; Raoul Mathieu, a painter; Destimare Pierre Marie Isnel (a.k.a. Louco), a sculptor who worked with discarded objects in the downtown Grand Rue slum; and Flores “Flo” McGarrell, an American artist and film director who in 2008 moved to Jacmel (a town with splendid French colonial architecture, some of which survived the quake) to head up a foundation that supported local artists.
The day I arrived in Port-au-Prince, I heard rumors of another possible casualty—Alix Roy, a reclusive, 79-year-old painter who had been missing since January 12. I knew Roy’s work well: he painted humorous scenes from Haitian life, often chubby kids dressed up as adults in elaborate costumes, some wearing oversize sunglasses, others balancing outrageously large fruits on their heads. Although he was a loner, Roy was an adventurous sort who had also lived in New York, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.
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Comments (10)
An excellent article by Bill Brubaker. My husband and I recently donated artworks for a fund raising auction "NO BOUNDARIES PROSTHETIC FOUNDATION" to help children of Haiti get and receive prosthesis.
Posted by Irina Cristobal on March 9,2011 | 06:30 PM
Hello World
As a native of Haiti, I was always proud of my country, despite of the stigma and the bad reputation. Reading an article like this, makes feel more encouraged to continue to work and do my part as a Haitian citizen. Thank you Smithsonian for exposing the true color of Haitians. Please,don't forget to take a virtual tour on www.destinationnorthhaiti.com Love you all. If possible, so far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men.Romans 12:18
Posted by Mr Gilles on October 15,2010 | 08:56 PM
Thank you for this wonderful article. I was assigned to the USAID mission in Port-au-Prince in 1978-81. During that time my wife and I collected several paintings, wood carvings and cut metal pieces. Today we cherish those works of art as well as our memories of all that we saw and did while living there. It is so hard to imagine the extent of damage and the number of people who died in the quake. But the Haitian people are resilient and hardworking. While it will take years, I know they will succeed in their efforts.
Posted by Allan Furman on September 13,2010 | 12:41 PM
Why can I not see the "more pictures" in the photo gallery?
Posted by lisbeth jardine on September 11,2010 | 08:57 PM
http://www.arthaiti.com/
http://www.friendsofhas.org/
Posted by Leslie Lanahan on September 10,2010 | 06:02 PM
Excellent article !
Haitians must be feel proud. Just in the adversity we figure out how strong we are.
They were victims, but now they are heros.
Congrats for the big labor Smithsonian !
Posted by Lia Villacorta on September 9,2010 | 07:36 PM
When I last visited Haiti, I wanted to buy some of the art on the roadside, but resisted the impulse. Is it being sold anywhere in the US? If so, where?
Posted by Mary McGarrity on September 3,2010 | 09:00 AM
It's amazing to see how much art was part of Haiti. I relized that the victims were not just poeple but the culture of Haiti. But reading this I relize that they will grow from all of this and that the art is not dead.
Good luck.
Daniel
Posted by Daniel on September 1,2010 | 11:48 AM
Thank-you for this excellent article on Haiti.
As a person who has served in Haiti for over two years now, and one who was in the Holy Trinity Music School when it collapsed during the January 12th earthquake, it is reassuring to know that the Smithsonian is involved in the restoration efforts.
Bless you!
Jeanne Gabriel Pocius
professor of music,
Ecole de Musique Ste Trinite
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Posted by Jeanne Pocius on August 28,2010 | 12:24 PM
In April 2004 I photographed many of the murals at Ste. Trinite Cathedral. I used my Canon Rebel digital camera. Would you like to see these? Linda Markee
Posted by Linda Markee on August 26,2010 | 04:19 PM