Y December continues until December 21st
Featured artists:
Barbara Jardine
Brianna McCarthy
Che Lovelace
Christopher Cozier
Edward Bowen
Giorvana Hadeed
Irénée Shaw
Janice Derrick
Jasmine Thomas-Girvan
Kenwyn Crichlow
Mairi Millar
Marlon Darbeau
Richard Hubbard
Roberta Stoddart
Susan Dayal
Wendy Nanan
Giorvana Hadeed
2024
15 x 22 1/2 inches
Etching with hard ground, soft ground and aquatint on paper
Limited Edition of 25
Susan Dayal
2024
28 inches (h) 11 3/8 x 11 3/8” (base)
Copper wire and tubing, teak and greenheart
Christopher Cozier
2004
14 x 19 3/4 inches
Mixed media on paper
Christopher Cozier
2004
19 1/2 x 14 inches
Mixed media on paper
Christopher Cozier
2004
14 x 20 inches
Mixed media on paper
Christopher Cozier
1995
8 1/4 x 11 inches
Mixed media note book sketch
Christopher Cozier
1997
Mixed media on paper
Che Lovelace
2024
14 ½ x 12 ½ inches
Acrylic and dry pigment on board panel
Che Lovelace
2024
14 ½ x 12 ½ inches
Acrylic and dry pigment on board panel
Che Lovelace
2024
14 ½ x 12 ½ inches
Acrylic and dry pigment on board panel
Che Lovelace
2024
12 ½ x 14 ½ inches
Acrylic and dry pigment on board panel
Che Lovelace
2024
12 ½ x 14 ½ inches
Acrylic and dry pigment on board panel
Brianna McCarthy
2024
11 1/4 x 11 1/4 inches
Acrylic, ink, white charcoal and metal leaf on paper
Brianna McCarthy
2024
11 1/4 x 11 1/4 inches
Acrylic, ink, white charcoaland metal leaf on paper
Barbara Jardine
15. HOOP EARRINGS: gold urchins /gold-filled metal & 14ct details
2024
Barbara Jardine
5. HOOP EARRINGS: silver & aqua urchin w/silver & blue topaz
2024
Barbara Jardine
9. HOOK EARRINGS: silver & blue urchins w/ silver & moonstones
2024
Barbara Jardine
7. HOOK EARRINGS: silver urchins w/silver a pale blue topaz
2024
Barbara Jardine
18. HOOP EARRINGS: silver & gold urchins w/14cl, silver & moonstones (sold)
19. PENDANT & CHAIN: silver & gold urchin w/14ct, silver & moonstone . (available)
2024
Barbara Jardine
20. NECKLACE: 18″ freshwater pearls w/urchin, 14ct and moonstone clasp
2024
Born: 1963, Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago. Irénée Shaw is an artist living and working in Trinidad. A figurative painter, the artist has shown her work locally and internationally since her return from study in the United States in 1988. Shaw has done numerous commissions in the Caribbean and also Germany. Most notably the CLICO “Pioneers of the Caribbean” calendar series in 1995. She has participated in the Big River International Workshop, the Santo Domingo Biennial, the Biennial of Cuenca and co-curated Lips Sticks and Marks – an exhibition of contemporary women artists and was a resident at the Vermont Studio Center in 2002. Shaw has taught art at Holy Name Convent, Port of Spain, since 2003
Image by Shaun Ramburan
Born 1963, Eddie Bowen studied at Croydon College, UK from 1981-1985. He has since been living and working in Trinidad, often letting his environment in San Souci, be his muse.
Image by Melissa Miller
Christopher Cozier is an artist, living and working in Trinidad and a co-director of Alice Yard, a collective, which will be participating in Documenta 15.
He was awarded a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2004 and is a Prince Claus Award laureate, 2013.
Through his notebook drawings to installations derived from recorded staged actions, Cozier investigates how Caribbean historical and current experiences can inform understandings of the wider contemporary world.
Exhibitions include the 5th & 7th Havana Biennials, Infinite Island, The Brooklyn Museum, (2007) Afro Modern: Journeys through the Black Atlantic (2010), TATE Liverpool, Entanglements at the Broad Museum, Michigan 2015. Relational Undercurrents at MOLAA. L.A. (2017) and The Sea is History, Historiskmuseum, Oslo, 2019. Cozier participated in the public program of 10th Berlin Biennial, 2018, exhibited in the 14th Sharjah Biennial in 2019 , the 11th Liverpool Biennial in 2021, Industrial Art Biennial, Croatia, 2020 and currently in Más Allá, el Mar Canta (Beyond, the Sea Sings) at the Times Art Center, Berlin, as well as Fragments of Epic Memory at the AGO ( Art Gallery of Ontario) and Experiences of Oil at the Stavanger Museum, Norway.
Image by Melissa Miller
Born in Trinidad in 1972, Janice migrated to England at the age of sixteen. In 1996 she graduated with a BA (Hons) in Silversmithing, Jewellery and Allied Crafts from the prestigious Sir John Cass faculty at London Guildhall University. The following year Janice received a Clerkenwell Award from the Clerkenwell Green Association to set up her studio near the heart of London’s jewellery quarter, Hatton Garden. In 2005, Janice returned to Trinidad where she continues to develop her jewellery and silversmithing practice.
Over the last twenty one years Janice has exhibited her work in Germany, France, Ireland, the US, Trinidad, Japan and across the UK. Her pieces have been featured in Vogue (UK), Harpers and Queen, World of Interiors, The Sunday Times (UK), The Guardian (UK), Retail Jeweller magazine (UK), Instyle magazine (UK), The Evening Standard(UK), Time Out London, The Newsday (Trinidad), Trinidad Express, Trinidad Lookbook, 6 Carlos (Trinidad) as well as The Rings Book (UK, 2002), 1000 Rings (US, 2004) and The Contemporary Jewelry Exchange (Denmark, 2015).
Images by Michele Jorsling
Susan Dayal was born in Trinidad in 1968. She studied Sculpture at the Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design in Dundee, Scotland.
Susan makes sculpture using the technique known locally as wirebending. The female torso and the mask are recurring themes that are used to explore the imagery of Trinidad Carnival, folklore, feminism and tropical flora and fauna.
Image by Melissa Miller
Giorvana Hadeed (b. 1999, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago) is an artist based between Trinidad and London. She works primarily with sculpture and installation. Her practice explores ideas surrounding the sea, the Caribbean, and notions of the landscape. Having a particular allure towards metal, her work takes shape through methods of mapping and circularity. She holds a BA from Goldsmiths, University of London.
Image by Melissa Miller
Kenywyn Crichlow is a practicing artist who has participated in solo exhibitions in Trinidad and Tobago and internationally from 1981 to present. Mr. Crichlow has taught at every level of the Education system in Trinidad and Tobago; primary and secondary schools, Teachers College and at the University of the West Indies. Kenwyn is also a key researcher on the history of visual arts in the Caribbean.
His paintings explore narratives of our culture and identity through vibrant, colourful compositions.
They seek to capture the full range of our experiences, and open us to the images that reside deep in the heart.
Image by Melissa Miller
In the earliest world when all was dark, the bat was born. Half-bird, half-beast, this liminal, mysterious and erratic creature is somehow apart or in-between, and does not fit into the normal order of things.
From the dark underworld comes the bat, ambiguous mentor of the foreboding night, gliding to its banishment with supernatural trickery, magic, witchcraft, shape-shifting, malevolence, death, destruction and decay. Re- imagined as fiction- al characters in popular culture, this nocturnal animal becomes legions of versions of the evil vampire Count Dracula and the hero Batman.
Positively aligned in some cultures with happiness, longevity and good fortune, bats also present as sacred spirits – intuitive, watchful, wakeful, and vigilant. Imag- es of bats appear in Heraldic symbols, coats of arms and State insignias.
In the beginning, human beings and all living creatures existed together in har- mony, mutual respect and inter-dependence. Then humans disregarded animals’ rights, provoking their hostility. Human beings do not share the planet with ani- mals and with nature. Instead we dominate and inflict unimaginable suffering on most life forms and on each other, resulting in climate change and an alarming number of other escalating catastrophic events.
Man’s destructive environmental, ecological and lifestyle practices coupled with his invasion of animal territories, create Monster Mergers in which viruses invade human bodies as their hosts. Deadly diseases have been unlocked – more recently the 1918 Bird Flu Influenza, HIV/Aids, Sars, Mers and Swine Influenzas. Despite being generally beneficial to our planet’s ecosystems, bats are the most likely source of the novel Coronavirus. The highly mobile, social, and long-lived bat is a natural reservoir of many pathogens and is perfectly situated to spread disease.
The great Amazon Forest, often referred to as “the Lungs of the World”, is now being plundered and stripped of its resources at breakneck speed by corrupt political practices and big business. What new and as yet unknown diseases will be unlocked from the Amazon jungle?
The world has been forcibly brought to its knees by Covid-19. Surely, this is THE “opportunity of our lifetime” to change the way we live. But will we change? Or will we continue in our self-inflicted suffering towards early extinction?
-Roberta Stoddart
Image by Abigail Hadeed
Mairi Millar is a Trinidadian artist based in London. Her work explores the beauty of nature’s discarded and “collaborating with chance”, creating works from found natural objects. Primarily through the language of jewellery, these forgotten or “finished” objects are elevated to the state of a relic. An eggshell is proof something emerged, a feather means something flew. These found objects are charged with an intimate vibrancy compared to the seemingly valuable materials they are set in. Her practice is an ode to the finder’s treasure; from human hair to houseflies; she does not shy away from the macabre to find beauty and hope.
Mairi is an alum of the Rhode Island School of Design (2018) and the Royal College of Art (2021). In 2021 she was awarded a residency at The Sarabande Foundation in London established by Lee Alexander McQueen.
Image by Melissa Miller
Wendy Nanan, born Port of Spain 1955, BFA 1979,has been working and showing continuously both in Trinidad and abroad since 1986. Some of her most notable shows and imagery to enter the Trinidadian iconography are from the cricket drawings, the Banana sculptures, and the Idyllic Marriage series. The Books and Stupas show, the Baby Krishna series and more recently in 2016 the shells and pods exhibition. Considered one of Trinidad’s treasured senior fine artists her personal vision is that of the contemporary West Indian artist observing a post-colonial creolised society through the lens of a traditional East Indian background, but rooted firmly in feminist ideology.