André Juste

André Juste (born ca. 1957, Haiti) is an artist and art critic evolving in the New York art scene whose work has been reviewed in the New York Times and the Miami Herald and has been noted for defying stereotypes of Haitian art.[1]

His sculpture "Pedro's Fire", though maintaining elements associated with the Haitian aesthetic, is an example of the new direction of the art produced by Haitian artists in the United States.[1]

Other Haitian and Haitian-American artists considered to be part of this wave are Vladimir Cybil Charlier with whom he has produced collaborative works and Rejin Leys with whom he has exhibited.[1]

Art criticism

Juste is also an art critic who is considered an expert on the work of Haitian artist Emmanuel Mérisier on which he has been interviewed by various publications.[2][3]

He has contributed a chapter titled Haitian Art to Henry Louis Gates and Anthony Appiah's Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience.[4]

Notable exhibits

Juste's work appeared along Vladimir Cybil Charlier's in Négritude: Exit Art which took place in Manhattan in 2009 and was curated by Greg Tate and literary historian Rose Myriam Réjouis.[5] The exhibit was reviewed by the New York Times.[5]

gollark: It's going slowly because programming is hard and I'm lazy and conflicted on some design aspects.
gollark: Minoteaur (v2.0.0 really early alpha) is a server-rendered webapp using SQLite/Node.js/Express. I briefly experimented with making UI-type stuff run on the client but it was annoying.
gollark: On the one hand that encourages non-stateful backends (using the database and FS for storage and not holding important stuff in RAM), which I do anyway, but on the others it's inefficient and annoying.
gollark: I like Node.js/Express for my random bodging because it's less evil than PHP (especially when type checked), has really great libraries available, and doesn't do the silly (conventional for PHP) "one execution of your script per request" thing.
gollark: On the PHP thing, popular does not mean or imply good.

References

  1. Pierre-Pierre, Garry (April 17, 1998). "Haitian Art Bursting Out". New York Times. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  2. "Exhibit by Haitian Artist Emmanuel Merisier Opens at Ramapo College". Ramapo College. February 2, 2004. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  3. Parker, Melody (September 22, 2013). "Modern master: Haitian heritage melds with 20th century influences". WCF Courier. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  4. Juste, André (2005). Gates, Henry Louis; Appiah, Anthony (eds.). Haitian Art. Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. Oxford University Press. pp. 125–127.
  5. Cotter, Holland (July 2, 2009). "Art in Review". New York Times. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.