Visiting Artist Lecture: Edouard Duval-Carrié
25jan6:00 pmVisiting Artist Lecture: Edouard Duval-Carrié6:00 pm
Time
January 25, 2017 6:00pm
Location
William Johnston Building (WJB) Room 2005
143 Honors Way, Tallahassee, FL 32306-1231
Event Details
Edouard Duval-Carrié Haitian artist Edouard Duval-Carrié will visit Florida State University for a week
Event Details
Haitian artist Edouard Duval-Carrié will visit Florida State University for a week in January, and will give a public lecture on January 25, 2017 at 6 pm in WJB 2005, as a guest of the Departments of Art History, Art, and Modern Languages. Duval-Carrié, a native of Port-au-Prince, Haiti who fled the regime of “Papa Doc” Duvalier as a teenager, studied at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts in Paris and at the University of Loyola Montreal in Quebec, and currently lives and works in Miami, Florida. His paintings and sculptures combine fantastic mythical imagery with histories and critiques of Haitian politics and society.
Duval-Carrié’s trip to FSU will also include an artist workshop, seminar visits, and preparations for an exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in the spring of 2018.
The Art & Design Library in WJB is home to Duval-Carrié’s vibrant nine-panel mixed media piece Sugar Conventions, in which the artist addresses complex aspects of Haitian society and history such as the plantation “culture of sugar,” the transmission of Voudou practice into the Americas as a result of the transatlantic slave trade, and the struggle for successful Haitian governance. In an essay describing Sugar Conventions’ intricate iconography Art History PhD candidate Lesley Wolff writes:
At heart, Duval-Carrié is an educator: he challenges the viewer to make meaning of dense iconography derived from Haitian history, politics, and religion. Duval- Carrié also re-appropriates, inscribing historical photographs, documents, paintings, and ephemera onto his own work and thus problematizing official Haitian narratives against lived realities.