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New York

Edward Thorp Gallery

Exhibition Detail
Mid 20th Century Haitian Painters
210 11th Ave. 6th Fl
New York, NY 10001


June 15th, 2012 - July 27th, 2012
 
Profile,Odilon PierreOdilon Pierre, Profile
© Courtesy of Edward Thorp Gallery
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Edward Thorp Gallery is pleased to announce Haitian Masters; an exhibition showcasing the
paintings of four self-taught artists never before shown together in New York. The work of
Wesner La Forest, Peterson Laurent, Odilon Pierre, Bourmond Byron manifest their originality
through a compellingly expressive visual language. This exhibit celebrates themes both universal
and particularly Haitian; the rich cultural landscape of daily life in Haiti emerges, with its rituals
and folklore, creating a detailed and poignant portrait of Haiti, its single-mindedness,
resourcefulness and faith.
Bourmond Byron was born in June in Jacmel in the early1920's, the son of a general in the
Haitian army, and died in 2004. Before he became a painter, he worked as a carpenter and ship
builder, but a 1948 visit to the Centre d’Art convinced him to take up painting. He practiced
occasionally as a dokte fe, or leaf Doctor (herbalist). He was also an avid follower of voodoo and
often chose to paint ceremonial scenes in addition to scenes of Haitian daily life. Byron has been
called the most romantic of the Haitian painters. Best known for his luminous blues and greens
and the use of silhouetted forms, Byron created an otherworldly and mysterious atmosphere in
dream like landscapes. His works are included in the permanent collections of the Musée d'Art
Haïtien du Collége Saint Pierre in Port-au-Prince, the Milwaukee Museum of Art, and the
Waterloo Museum of Art in Iowa.
Wesner La Forest was born in around 1927 died in 1965. Not much is known of this mystery
man of Haitian art, though he is said to have been a carnival mask maker among other things
before he came to the Centre d'Art. In the early 1960's, record has it that La Forest, who suffered
from regular bouts of epilepsy turned up at the Centre d'Art produced a small body of paintings,
and died suddenly during an epileptic seizure a year or so after his arrival. Years later one intrepid
collector found a small stack of works in the basement of the Centre d' Art. His subjects were
voodoo and his portraits hypnotic in their startling frontality. All are painted with an evocative
forcefulness and expressive style, producing charged forms with a direct paint handling. Mostly
small, painted on cardboard or masonite and rarely on canvas, his paintings are permeated with a
mysterious power. His work is included in the permanent collections of the Wadsworth
Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut and Ramapo College in Mahwah, New Jersey.
Little is known of Petersen Laurent, who was active between 1940-1958, worked as a railroad
blacksmith, and died at about the age of 70 in Saint-Marc. His name is often linked with the
widely-celebrated acknowledged ‘Masters of the Haitian Renaissance’ a group spawned to a great
extent by the creation of the Centre d'Art in the 1940s, His themes included scenes of American
battleships and rural life, roosters with hens, fish and flowers with vases, often drawing on themes
of voodoo and ritual sacrifice. His candid drawing style combined with a textured paint
application produces a sensation of high detail, to his high-keyed color, often single file
compositions.
Odilon Pierre was born in 1933 in Port-au-Prince died 1998. His father was a carpenter, his
mother a merchant. Pierre began carving wood sculpture as a teenager then turned to painting.
Mostly active during the 1980s and early 1990s, Pierre was a resolutely independent self-taught
artist who shied from the traditional Haitian themes. His highly personal subjects included
portraits, field workers, animals, flowers and peasant women all joyfully executed with an
intimate connection to his materials, mainly small canvas's. Often he depicts crowded scenes
verging on the symbolism, turning form into design, with a fresh and imaginative subtlety of
surface. He dynamically managed to capture the profound richness and mystery of the Haitian
connection to the soil. Formerly Pierre's work could only be seen at only one outlet, from his
encased vendor's stall in the deep recesses of the fabled iron market in the heart of downtown
Port-au-Prince.


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