Patchwork : Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture /: Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture. (2022)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Patchwork : Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture /: Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture. (2022)
- Main Title:
- Patchwork : Essays & Interviews on Caribbean Visual Culture
- Further Information:
- Note: Jacqueline Bishop.
- Authors:
- Bishop, Jacqueline
- Contents:
- Acknowledgments ; Introduction; ; The Importance of Place ; 1. Wendy Nanan Talks about the Importance of Place in Her Works; 2. Annalee Davis Uses Art to Unearth and Interrogate; 3. For Deborah Anzinger, Ecology Is of Utmost Importance; 4. Puerto Rico’s Lionel Cruet’s Artworks Are Focused on the Intimate Relationship with the Environment; 5. The In-between Places of Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow’s Visual Art Practice; 6. Robin Farquharson, Unplugged; ; The Process of Art-Making ; 7. Garfield Morgan Discusses an Intuitive Approach to Art-Making; 8. Jasmine Thomas-Girvan Utilizes the Subject of Loss to Right the Wrongs of the Past and the Present; 9. Alicia Brown Revisits and Revises Colonial Narratives within the Languages of Portraiture and Painting; 10. Living Gratefully: An Interview with Earl McKenzie; 11. Katrina Coombs Discusses Her Fetish for Creating Fine-Art Fiber Works; 12. Olivia McGilchrist Explores Caribbean Futures in Virtual Reality Narratives; ; Women and Visual Culture ; 13. Using Objects to Convey Meaning and Break Silences: An Interview with Material Culture Expert Steeve Buckridge; 14. Master Jamaican Mat-Maker Sane Mae Dunkley Wove Together the Story of the Jamaican People<br />15. Women and Art: An Interview with O’Neil Lawrence; 16. Jamaica’s Rich Bio-Diversity Is Painter Amy Laskin’s Muse; 17. Oneika Russell Engages the Tropical Body and Caribbean Identity; 18. For Amanda Coulson, Women Artists in Particular Should Remain Vigilant; ; Challenging Boundaries ; 19.Acknowledgments ; Introduction; ; The Importance of Place ; 1. Wendy Nanan Talks about the Importance of Place in Her Works; 2. Annalee Davis Uses Art to Unearth and Interrogate; 3. For Deborah Anzinger, Ecology Is of Utmost Importance; 4. Puerto Rico’s Lionel Cruet’s Artworks Are Focused on the Intimate Relationship with the Environment; 5. The In-between Places of Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow’s Visual Art Practice; 6. Robin Farquharson, Unplugged; ; The Process of Art-Making ; 7. Garfield Morgan Discusses an Intuitive Approach to Art-Making; 8. Jasmine Thomas-Girvan Utilizes the Subject of Loss to Right the Wrongs of the Past and the Present; 9. Alicia Brown Revisits and Revises Colonial Narratives within the Languages of Portraiture and Painting; 10. Living Gratefully: An Interview with Earl McKenzie; 11. Katrina Coombs Discusses Her Fetish for Creating Fine-Art Fiber Works; 12. Olivia McGilchrist Explores Caribbean Futures in Virtual Reality Narratives; ; Women and Visual Culture ; 13. Using Objects to Convey Meaning and Break Silences: An Interview with Material Culture Expert Steeve Buckridge; 14. Master Jamaican Mat-Maker Sane Mae Dunkley Wove Together the Story of the Jamaican People<br />15. Women and Art: An Interview with O’Neil Lawrence; 16. Jamaica’s Rich Bio-Diversity Is Painter Amy Laskin’s Muse; 17. Oneika Russell Engages the Tropical Body and Caribbean Identity; 18. For Amanda Coulson, Women Artists in Particular Should Remain Vigilant; ; Challenging Boundaries ; 19. Jaime Lee Loy Walks the Fine Line between the Familiar and the Unfamiliar; 20. Sheena Rose Seeks to Challenge People (and Boundaries) with Her Work; 21. Exploring the Art of Female Sexual Desires; 22. Llanor Alleyne’s Female Figures Grounded in Nature as an Assertion and Reclamation of Inner Selves; 23. La Vaughn Belle’s Contemporary Art Practice of Speaking in Layers; 24. Artist Kereina Chang Fatt Uses Her Work to Address Relationships, Community, and Connectedness; ; Defying Easy Categorization ; 25. Krista Thompson Brings a Critical Eye to What Is Confined to the Footnotes of Art History; 26. For Art Historian Edward J. Sullivan, the Caribbean (and Caribbean Artists, like Puerto Rico’s Francisco Oller) Defy Easy Categorization; 27. Queen Victoria Give We Free: Tackling Victorian Jamaica in the Visual Arts; 28. Pre-Raphaelite Sisters Exhibition Features Jamaican: An Interview with Jan Marsh; 29. Art Historian and Curator Allison Thompson Believes That Art Is a Forum to Envision What Is; Possible; 30. Where Others See Fragmentation, Tatiana Flores Sees Continuity in Caribbean Art; ; Appendix ; About the Author … (more)
- Edition:
- 1st
- Publisher Details:
- Bristol : Intellect Books
- Publication Date:
- 2022
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- DESIGN / Decorative Arts
Decorative arts - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781789386479
1789386470 - Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.756011
- Ingest File:
- 18_043.xml