Natural Histories: A Note on Cotton Trees and Jamaican Art

nationalgalleryofjamaica's avatarNational Gallery of Jamaica

TOM CRINGLE’S COTTON TREE: This Ceiba, or Silk Cotton, tree is of a type common to many parts of Jamaica. Its majestic spread of branches provides shade and shelter, and you will notice, a host of many types of parasitic plans. This particular tree was mentioned in ‘Tom Cringle’s Log” a 19th century novel by Michael Scott. Cotton trees are believed by the superstitious to be the haunt of “duppies” (ghosts)

Jamaica Tourist Board, Kingston, Jamaica

The Silk Cotton tree or Ceiba Pentandra is indigenous to the tropical Americas, Jamaica included, and a variety is also found in West Africa. One of the largest and most visually spectacular indigenous trees, the Silk Cotton tree takes more than a century to reach its typical size – up to 40 metres high and with the diameter of its trunk up to 3 metres – and to develop its dramatic buttress roots. The…

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Ellen Gallagher @ Tate Modern

africanartinlondon's avatarAfrican Art in London

Ellen Gallagher’s first major UK retrospective is currently being held at the Tate Modern until 1 September. The title of the exhibition, AxME, is a play on words: to resemble the cartoon corporation Acme, known for its outlandish products that fail catastrophically, also a reference to the African-American vernacular for “Ask me”.

Gallagher’s work is gorgeously intricate, bringing together myth, nature, art and social history in painting, drawing, relief collage, print, sculpture, film and animation. In 2007 a series of her Watery Ecstatic paintings, inspired by the myth of the Black Atlantis – an underwater city populated by the descendents of Africans thrown off slave ships – was shown at the Tate Liverpool.  To know more about her work and how she creates be sure to read this Guardian interview with her from a few weeks ago. Also: Jackie Kay’s review of her Tate Liverpool show, Coral Cities.

A standout piece from…

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A Touch of Art

Natural Histories: Cecil Baugh, Egyptian Blue (1992)

nationalgalleryofjamaica's avatarNational Gallery of Jamaica

The work of Cecil Baugh, Jamaica’s master potter, holds an important place in the history of Jamaican art. Though there is a long tradition of pottery in Jamaica dating back to the Taino, Baugh was the first to systematically explore pottery as fine art; researching and utilising local clays and forms extensively and developing a number of glazes such as Egyptian Blue shown here. As a young man, Baugh’s work consisted largely of traditional Jamaican pottery- yabbas and monkey jars- used for domestic purposes. He soon began to experiment with developing his own style. In his  book, Baugh: Jamaica’s Master Potter (1986)co-written with Laura Tanna, he writes:

I thought of glazes but the transparent lead glaze was the only one available. So I started off to experiment. None of the other traditional potters were making coloured glazes but I could see the imported pots were coloured and I thought…

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See The Beauty In Haiti With Photographer Maggie Steber’s New Show In Coral Gables

Strange Cargo: Jane Alexander at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine

Neelika Jayawardane's avatarAfrica is a Country (Old Site)

Okwui Enwezor described the ephemera of Africa that arrived in European docks as “strange cargo”: as it was unloaded from ship to warehouse by longshoremen, as it was bid on, sold, and displayed in wealthy homes, lost and rediscovered, each object shaped European visions of Africa. ‘Africa’ as we imagine it now, was shaped by that strange cargo. Later in his essay in the January 1996 issue of frieze, Enwezor asked, “Why do we never consider the achievements of those artists who at great professional cost and individual isolation have not only transcended but have equally transfigured the borders constituting the notion of Africanity?” South African artist Jane Alexander’s work, now positioned throughout the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Manhattan’s Morningside Heights neighbourhood, is part of the tradition of Africa’s strange cargo, but it is freight that – possibly at the cost of easy audience engagement, and…

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Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color

Behind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color
Behind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color
Behind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color
Behind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of ColorBehind-the-Scenes - Installing Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color

Behind the scenes of the current exhibition at the Renwick Gallery.

Photojournalism: Restaveks, the “Ultimate Have-Nots in a Society of Have-Nots”

Bermuda’s ACE showcases heritage with Anna Lefroy’s botanical paintings