21 Facts About Caribbean art

1.

Caribbean art refers to the visual as well as plastic arts originating from the islands of the Caribbean.

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2.

Art in the Caribbean reflects thousands of years of habitation by Arawak, Kalinago, and other people of the Caribbean followed by waves of immigration, which included artists of European origins and subsequently by artists with heritage from countries all around the world.

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3.

The nature of Caribbean art reflects these diverse origins, as artists have taken their traditions and adapted these influences to reflect the reality of their lives in the Caribbean.

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4.

Governments of the Caribbean have at times played a central role in the development of Caribbean culture.

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5.

The height of pre-colonial Caribbean art emerged between 1000 and 1492 with the Taino people, whose ceramic production, rock art, stonework, and other artworks are historically the most significant and widespread in the region.

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6.

Settlement in the Caribbean art islands began by the Spanish on the island of Hispaniola as early as 1496.

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7.

Currently little or no research has been done to highlight the early French influenced art forms originating in the Caribbean, nor to list artists who might fit within this category.

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8.

Contemporary art in the Caribbean reflects an engagement with the region's cultural past.

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9.

Art in the Caribbean has been influenced by its many different islands and their respective micro-cultures throughout the years.

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10.

The Caribbean has a wide array of cultures to be expressed and is only recently gaining traction as an independent region of contemporary art; This can be more broadly depicted by viewing the different periods of migration to the islands, first from the colonization of the islands, to the various European influences such as the Spanish, French, and English.

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11.

Caribbean art began to push socialist ideologies and integrated this into her artwork, especially during times of civil unrest in Jamaica in the 1960s and 1970s.

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12.

Caribbean art began painting more due to her old age causing sculpting to become difficult.

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13.

Caribbean art then continued her education in the United States and received a MFA degree in 2006 from the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts at Washington University in St Louis.

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14.

Caribbean art is widely known for her colorful tapestries made out of unique materials.

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15.

Caribbean art expresses her work via various forms of media such as paintings, drawings, and collages.

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16.

Caribbean art has plans to travel internationally and continue to attend art shows.

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17.

Caribbean art is young and continues to inspire artists around the world and showcase the unique culture of art that stems from the Caribbean area.

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18.

Maksaens Denis is a video and installation artist of Caribbean new media art; Born in 1968 in Port-au-Prince.

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19.

Caribbean art derives strong influences from classical and experimental music and concerns his work with an intersection of performance, spirituality, queerness, and politics.

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20.

Caribbean art commonly depicts the historical processes that shape the identity of black atlantic subjects.

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21.

Caribbean art is currently living in working in Port-au-Prince and continues to derive video installations that express the culture of the region.

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