Didier William

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FORECAST FORM: ART IN THE CARIBBEAN DIASPORA, 1990S–TODAY

Esta exposición propone que el Caribe es una manera de pensar, ser y hacer, la cual se extiende más allá de sus fronteras geográficas, desafiando nuestras suposiciones sobre la cultura caribeña y su representación, y redefiniendo la relación entre la identidad y el lugar.

Lucia Hierro, Aesthetics y Politics, 2019, site-specific installation at MoAD. Courtesy: MoAD

Coffee, Rhum, Sugar & Gold:a Postcolonial Paradox

«Coffee, Rhum, Sugar & Gold: A Postcolonial Paradox», an exhibition on view at the Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD), looks at the legacy of European colonialism in the Caribbean through the work of ten contemporary artists. Whether connected to the Caribbean by birth or focused on the region by choice, the exhibiting artists use their work as a means of examining the relationship between the power structure, those who are controlled by it, those who benefit from it, and those who actively seek to liberate themselves from it. With roots in a variety of Caribbean countries including the Bahamas, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico, participating artists are Firelei Báez, Leonardo Benzant, Andrea Chung, Adler Guerrier, Lucia Hierro, Lavar Munroe, Angel Otero, Ebony G. Patterson, Phillip Thomas, and Didier William.