Category: Art-icles

Wildflower 

Like the ixora’s habit of branching and growth, its flower-clusters attracting pollinators into its constellations of small flowers, there is something essentially creative and generative about Gosine’s work. Each new project gives rise to new connections. His approach to ideas seeks not to answer but to ask, not to close subjects but to open them…

The Human Club

The nature culture divide has been the ruling rubric in determining which animals have the right to be considered human and ipso facto are rights bearers in general—namely those who renounce their animality and are cultured into humanity. Of course, the gatekeepers to humanity are none other than those privileged to attain such status simply by being, by the simple fact of their existence as dominant males occupying the very apex of the totem pole of the universe created by Homo patriarchus.

Divine Idyll (Richard and Tim)

The direct gaze of the two men who occupy the painting’s center suggests a contemporary and queer replacement of the man-woman dichotomy of the iconic painting American Gothic, which represents the tillers and toilers of the land. In Root’s image, McCaskell and Fung express desire for and actual participation in a larger world — the expected backdrop of portraiture is replaced by suggestions of world travel and adventure.

Carlitos’ Way

The two figures, Gosine and Carlitos, appear together in London, Ontario-based artist and poet Angie Quick’s majestic eight-by-four-foot oil painting and diptych Carlitos’ Way (2023), whimsically titled by Gosine after the 1993 gangster film of the same name.

Roberta Stoddart’s “All in the Family”

In her newest series, Jamaican visual artist Roberta Stoddart takes on the discomforting task of inviting viewers into the Caribbean home-space to interrogate and disrupt the practice of incest, a reality we shudder to face and stammer to speak of in the Caribbean.  Over six oil paintings, none larger than 20 x 15 inches, Stoddart tells the story of a Caribbean family attempting to hide wounds of incest inflicted within the home.

Censoring Caribbean Artists at the OAS’s Museum: An Interview with Andil Gosine

Nature’s Wild grew out of the book of the same name and addressed the same tensions: human-animal relations and histories of animalization and race in the Caribbean — how colonists, then postcolonial elites, put the onus on marginalized people to prove themselves human and “not-animal,” for example through dress codes, laws about sexuality, and definitions of citizenship.

Excavating the Bones of New Deities in Margaret Chen’s Work

Interior’s most striking feature is the taxidermized bird embedded within it. Possibly a direct reference to the Ziz, the bird can also be seen as a poignant symbol for the act of sacrifice. The root meaning of sacrifice is to ‘make something holy’. The way this creature which has forever departed its mortal shell is remade into something, commanding such awe is a means of transmuting it into something holy. Its encasement in clear glass is also meaningful — a material which like water is reflective and often considered a portal. Here it serves as a container, trapping a thing that was once free and unbound even from the laws of gravity. The creature is given a second life in a way, but a life it cannot make use of.

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PREE 14

FICTION

The Talking Forest of Yaminsa
Ayasha Ayurbe

 

Seaside
Jose Belaval

 

Lifting the Veil
Yvonne Weekes

 

Scarface
Melanie Grant

 

All is Not Lost in Translation
Yzahira Valle García

 

Bush Baths
Amanda Haynes

 

Frankie’s Father
Danielle James

 

NONFICTION

The Things We Inherit, The Things We Let Go
Ashae Forsythe

 

POETRY

There is Only Wailing, The First Cries, Inheritance
Yashika Graham

 

An Abecedarian Cut in Half Like a Nose
Amelia Badri

 

Two Poems About Love
Kendel Hippolyte

 

bi·sex·u·al
Choiselle Joseph

 

beautiful hand
Allison Whittenberg

 

For Alton Ellis and other Poems
Amílcar Peter Sanatan

 

To Talk of Trees, The Cannon Ball Tree, Bloody Orange
Debra Providence

 

Blood Songs, Beasts of the Island, Storm Seasons
Joely Williams

 

ART-ICLES

Roberta Stoddart’s “All in the Family” 
Isis Semaj-Hall

 

INTERVIEWS

Unmothered, Unafraid, and Free: A Conversation with Camille U. Adams
Caryn Rae Adams

Entertainment Report on PREE