Many
historians date the beginning of Haitian art with the opening of
the Centre D'Art in Port-au-Prince, by DeWitt Peters in 1944. However,
artistic activity has always held a place in Haitian history. As
early as 1807, Henri Christophe encouraged the development of art
in the new independent black country. In 1816, Alexandre Petion
helped a french artist to establish an art school in Port-au-Prince.
Although some smaller schools arose during those early years, the
emphasis of the art was on religion and portraiture.
When DeWitt Peters opened the Centre D'Art
, he created an environment in which talented artists could express
themselves, and young artists could develop their skills. In this
way he provided exhibition space as well as instruction space.
Amazingly, the founders of the Centre D'Art
uncovered a wealth of talent that would forever affect the history
of the art movement in Haiti. The first
painter to gain recognition was Hector Hyppolite. He was a voodoo
priest whose innate ability made him one of the greatest natural
painters of modern times. Those early painters, known as the first
generation of artists, included the now popular, Philome Obin, Rigaud
Benoit, Castera Bazile and Wilson
Bigaud. These men were completely artistically untrained. They came
to their canvasses as bookkeepers, truck drivers, and houseboys.
Their subjects were most often what they perceived in their everyday
mundane existence and what they learned from their mythical religion,
voodoo Although they came from simple backgrounds, their paintings
were full of passion and color. They managed to integrate what they
saw, felt and believed and express it with intensity of emotion
and a childlike innocence. These men had no formal education, no
visual training and basically developed their styles in isolation
from the rest of the art world.
The first generation inspired a second generation
of painters. These new painters had the good fortune to benefit
from the numerous art schools that developed in Port au Prince and
Cap Haitien. As the art world discovered the wonders of the naive
Haitian art and the artists were exposed to different artistic styles
, each generation of Haitian artist become more sophisticated and
trained. Some of the third and fourth generation of artists still
use what is known as the naive or primitive original style in their
works, while others employ new materials and styles.
Whichever their choice of style, the Haitian artist will always
represent a folk art expression of spontaneity and simplicity.
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