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Vaudou / Voodoo
Spirit in Art
The Pan American Art Gallery will present an exhibition
entitled Vaudou/Voodoo: Spirit in Art, beginning May 24, 2003 with an
opening reception May 23 from 6-9 p.m. The show will close July 19. Artist
Edouard Duval-Carrie will be in attendance and will speak at 7 p.m.
Vaudoo in Haiti, Obeáh in Jamaica, Santeria in Cuba,
like their counterpart, Condomblé in Brazil, all have their origin in the
massive influx of Yoruba and related African peoples brought to the New
World as slaves. Over time, their deities became syncretized with the saints
of the Catholic tradition.
The exhibit explores the influence of afro-Caribbean
religions on the visual arts and shows how similarities in style and content
surface in artists’ work from different islands united by a common spirit:
the spirit of art in ritual. As color, decoration and artistic creation have
always been central elements in the practice of these religions, the overlap
between art and religion is inevitable.
Included in this montage of work are alters, cut metal,
bronze, wood and cement sculptures, paintings and sacred flags. Over 60
works from over 30 artists will be on display from the likes of Wifredo Lam,
Rene Portocarrero, Manuel Mendive and Zaida del Rio from Cuba; Hector
Hyppolite, Eduard Duval-Carrié, Pierre Louis Prospere and Stivenson
Magloire from Haiti; and Everald Brown, Kapo, Feeya and Woody from Jamaica.
Pan American Art Gallery is located in the Turtle Creek
neighborhood of Dallas at 3303 Lee Parkway, Suite 101. The gallery is open
Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. – 6 p.m., Saturday noon – 6 p.m. Call 214-522-3303
for more information or visit
www.panamericanart.com.
Specializing in art from the Caribbean basin, the Pan
American Art Gallery features avant-garde and contemporary Cuban works, as
well as contemporary and folk art from Haiti and Jamaica.
Edited by Madelyn Miller
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