Multimedia artist who, as a sculptor, prefers to work with wood. Her inspiration comes from the earth. She interprets its energy along with the lush vegetation and the constant river at her home in Jamaica.
Contemporary digital-media and oil whose work in oils brings a more soulful satisfaction due to its materiality.
Jamaican writer and filmmaker who uses his art to reflect black and Caribbean people’s lived realities while exploring reoccurring themes of gender, sexuality, migration, familiar bonds, and the intersectional identities found between the margins.
Textile Artist who uses her passion for fibre and understanding of the sensitivity of threads and fabric to bring into being unique designs and sculptural forms. Her practice employs fibre and the body to engage the role and existence of women, the M(O)ther and I.
Painter whose works have been described as brave, dense, bold, thoroughly executed, and deeply felt. Intense and disturbing, they stimulate questions about our collective prejudices, our psychological spaces, and our notions of belonging.
Multi-disciplinary artist focusing on the cultural and social legacies of colonialism and its effects today, primarily on the Black majority in Jamaica, with implications for other nations with similar colonial histories.
Contemporary realist oil painter. Brown’s practice examines mimicry in nature and applies it to the human world, elaborating on the historical tensions of colonisation, appropriation, class, and self-agency.
Jamaican multidisciplinary artist whose work encompasses multi-sensory installation, sculpture, video, photography, and printmaking. His practice considers how current realities are shaped by both visible and less visible histories.
Jamaican artist from Warsop, Trelawny, who works in a variety of media, including painting, drawing, digital design, and sculpture.
Mixed media artist incorporating a wide range of materials and mediums to explore themes of life’s experiences.
Sculptor also trained in jewelery and textile design whose poetically inflected works are grounded in the specificity of the Caribbean landscape and the region’s colonial past, but they open out into universal themes, most prominently transformation and the construction of identity.
Mixed Media Artist known for sculptural installations composed of discarded material found and collected in his neighbourhood. Ward re-contextualises these found objects in thought-provoking juxtapositions that create complex, metaphorical meanings to confront social and political issues surrounding race, poverty, and consumer culture. He intentionally leaves the meaning of his work open.