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 6 of 7)
Zéphirin said he walked several hours, at times climbing over corpses, to get to his house. “That’s where I learned that my stepmother and five of my cousins had died,” he said. But his pregnant girlfriend was alive; so were his children.
“That night, I decided I had to paint,” Zéphirin said. “So I took my candle and went to my studio on the beach. I saw a lot of death on the way. I stayed up drinking beer and painting all night. I wanted to paint something for the next generation, so they can know just what I had seen.”
Zéphirin led me to the room in the gallery where his earthquake paintings were hung. One shows a rally by several fully clothed skeletons carrying a placard written in English: “We need shelters, clothes, condoms and more. Please help.”
“I’ll do more paintings like these,” Zéphirin said. “Each day 20 ideas for paintings pass in my head, but I don’t have enough hands to make all of them.” (Smithsonian commissioned the artist to create the painting that appears on the cover of this magazine. It depicts the devastated island nation with grave markers, bags of aid money and birds of mythic dimensions delivering flowers and gifts, such as “justice” and “health.”) In March, Zéphirin accepted an invitation to show his work in Germany. And two months later, he would head to Philadelphia for a one-man show, titled “Art and Resilience,” at the Indigo Arts Gallery.
A few miles up a mountain road from Pétionville, one of Haiti’s most celebrated contemporary artists, Philippe Dodard, was preparing to bring more than a dozen earthquake-inspired paintings to Arte Américas, an annual fair in Miami Beach. Dodard showed me a rather chilling black-and-white acrylic that was inspired by the memory of a friend who perished in an office building. “I’m calling this painting Trapped in the Dark,” he said.
I have no idea how Dodard, a debonair man from Haiti’s elite class whose paintings and sculptures confirm his passion for his country’s voodoo and Taíno cultures, had found time to paint. He told me he had lost several friends and family members in the quake, as well as the headquarters of the foundation he helped create in the mid-1990s to promote culture among Haitian youth. And he was busily involved in a project to convert a fleet of school buses—donated by the neighboring Dominican Republic—into mobile classrooms for displaced students.
Like Zéphirin, Dodard seemed determined to work through his grief with a paintbrush in hand. “How can I continue living after one of the biggest natural disasters in the history of the world? I can’t,” he wrote in the inscription that would appear next to his paintings at the Miami Beach show. “Instead I use art to express the deep change that I see around and inside me.”
For the Haitian art community, more hopeful news was on the way. In May, the Smithsonian Institution launched an effort to help restore damaged Haitian treasures. Led by Richard Kurin, under secretary for history, art and culture, and working with private and other public organizations, the Institution established a “cultural recovery center” at the former headquarters of the U.N. Development Program near Port-au-Prince.
“It’s not every day at the Smithsonian that you actually get to help save a culture,” Kurin says. “And that’s what we’re doing in Haiti.”
On June 12, after months of preparation, conservators slipped on their gloves in the Haitian capital and got to work. “Today was a very exciting day for...conservators, we got objects into the lab! Woo hoo!” the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Hugh Shockey enthused on the museum’s Facebook page.
Kurin sounded equally pumped. “The first paintings we brought in were painted by Hector Hyppolite. So we were restoring those on Sunday,” he told me a week later. “Then on Monday our conservator from the American Art Museum was restoring Taíno, pre-Colombian artifacts. Then on Tuesday the paper conservator was dealing with documents dating from the era of the Haitian struggle for independence. And then the next day we were literally on the scaffolding at the Episcopal cathedral, figuring out how we’re going to preserve the three murals that survived.”
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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