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 5 of 7)
Back at his gallery in Pétionville, Nader showed me a Hyppolite still life he had recovered. I recognized it, having admired the painting in 2009 at a retrospective at the Organization of American States’ Art Museum of the Americas in Washington. But the 20- by 20-inch painting was now broken into eight pieces. “This will be restored by a professional,” Nader said. “We have begun restoring the most important paintings we have recovered.”
I heard other echoes of cautious optimism as I visited cultural sites across Port-au-Prince. A subterranean, government-run historical museum that contained some important paintings and artifacts had survived. So did a private voodoo and Taíno museum in Mariani (near the quake’s epicenter) and an ethnographic collection in Pétionville. People associated with the destroyed Holy Trinity Cathedral and Centre d’Art, as well as the Episcopal Church’s structurally feeble Haitian Art Museum, assured me that these institutions will be rebuilt. But no one could say how or when.
The United Nations has announced that 59 countries and international organizations have pledged $9.9 billion as “the down payment Haiti needs for wholesale national renewal.” But there’s no word on how much of that money, if any, will ever reach the cultural sector.
“We deeply believe that Haitians living abroad can help us with the funds,” said Henry Jolibois, an artist and architect who is a technical consultant to the Haitian prime minister’s office. “For the rest, we must convince other entities in the world to participate, such as the museums and private collectors who have huge Haitian naive painting collections.”
At the Holy Trinity Cathedral 14 murals had long offered a distinctively Haitian take on biblical events. My favorite was the Marriage at Cana by Wilson Bigaud, a painter who excelled at glimpses into everyday Haitian life—cockfights, market vendors, baptismal parties, rara band parades. While some European artists portrayed the biblical event at which Christ turned water into wine as being rather formal, Bigaud’s Cana was a decidedly casual affair with a pig, rooster and two Haitian drummers looking on. (Bigaud died this past March 22 at age 79.)
“That Marriage at Cana mural was very controversial,” Haiti’s Episcopal bishop, Jean Zaché Duracin, told me in his Pétionville office. “In the ’40s and ’50s many Episcopalians left the church in Haiti and became Methodists because they didn’t want these murals at the cathedral. They said, ‘Why? Why is there a pig in the painting?’ They didn’t understand there was a part of Haitian culture in these murals.”
Duracin told me it took him three days to gather the emotional strength to visit Holy Trinity. “This is a great loss, not only for the Episcopal church but for art worldwide,” he said.
Visiting the site myself one morning, I saw two murals that were more or less intact—The Baptism of Our Lord by Castera Bazile and Philomé Obin’s Last Supper. (A third mural, Native Street Procession, by Duffaut, has survived, says former Smithsonian Institution conservator Stephanie Hornbeck, but others were destroyed.)
At the Haitian Art Museum, chunks of concrete had fallen on some of the 100 paintings on exhibit. I spotted one of Duffaut’s oldest, largest and finest imaginary village paintings propped against a wall. A huge piece was missing from the bottom. A museum employee told me the piece had not been found. As I left, I reminded myself that although thousands of paintings had been destroyed in Haiti, thousands of others survived, and many are outside the country in private collections and institutions, including the Waterloo Center for the Arts in Iowa and the Milwaukee Art Museum, which have important collections of Haitian art. I also took comfort from conversations I had had with artists like Duffaut, who were already looking beyond the next mountain.
No one displays Haiti’s artistic resolve more than Frantz Zéphirin, a gregarious 41-year-old painter, houngan and father of 12, whose imagination is as large as his girth.
“I’m very lucky to be alive,” Zéphirin told me late one afternoon in the Monnin gallery, where he was putting the finishing touches on his tenth painting since the quake. “I was in a bar on the afternoon of the earthquake, having a beer. But I decided to leave the bar when people starting talking about politics. And I’m glad I left. The earthquake came just one minute later, and 40 people died inside that bar.”
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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